When it's time to change the sewage system
don't change it - renovate instead
The traditional way of attending to kitchen and bathroom sewers that have served their time is to replace the piping. This often means that both ceilings and walls have to be torn down, that tons of materials have to be carried away and possibly cleared of asbestos, that new floors must be cast and that residents have to be evacuated for months. An alternative to these bothersome, resource demanding and capital destructing actions is the DaKKI method, which since 1992 has saved both time, money and the environment.
Using the DaKKI method, all parts of a sewage system can be renovated to a state as good as new, both plastic and cast iron. The pipes are lined with a surface layer of elastic thermosetting plastic, which is very resistant against chemicals and which picks up the movements that arise in the pipes when temperatures change.