Efficient storm water drainage network design and hydraulic studies for Al Ain projects
Effective storm water management protects roads, buildings and infrastructure from flooding. Al Ain Approval Services designs efficient storm water drainage networks to approved standards, combining hydraulic analysis with practical, buildable routing to safeguard your development in Al Ain.
Storm water network design is the engineering of drainage systems that collect, convey and safely discharge rainfall runoff. It involves catchment analysis, hydraulic studies, pipe and channel sizing, and optimal route planning in line with Abu Dhabi building codes and authority requirements.
Our engineers carry out detailed hydraulic studies and water flow analysis to size every component correctly, plan optimal network routes, and ensure the design performs reliably under peak rainfall while remaining cost-effective to construct and maintain.
Contact Al Ain Approval Services today for a free consultation. Our experts are ready to help you navigate the authority approval process efficiently and successfully. Let us handle the complexity while you focus on your project.
Storm water network design is the engineering of drainage systems that collect, convey and safely discharge rainfall runoff. It involves catchment analysis, hydraulic studies, pipe and channel sizing, and optimal route planning in line with Abu Dhabi building codes. Effective storm water management protects roads, buildings and infrastructure from flooding.
Yes. Our engineers carry out detailed hydraulic studies and water flow analysis to size every component correctly and plan optimal network routes. This ensures the design performs reliably under peak rainfall while remaining cost-effective to construct and maintain.
Storm water network designs are submitted to authorities such as ITC and IDAS, in compliance with approved technical standards and building codes. We prepare the drawings, hydraulic calculations and design reports and secure the required approvals. A site survey, levels and catchment data are typically needed to begin.
Last updated: June 2026 · Reviewed by the DAS and Partners Engineering Consultancy team