Huge thanks to everyone who made this possible! Producing this series was an adventure. If you love infrastructure as much as I do, you might like my book or Infrastructure Road Trip Bingo (or both at a discount!): store.practical.engineering/
I LOVED this series!!! I REALLY hope you continue with it... and it ABSOLUTELY belongs on this channel!!! This is the end result of what the engineers start on paper, so it's part of the engineering process. ( perhaps the making of some of the parts that engineers require would also be a series for the future of the channel?? i.e. "How Its Made: Grady Hillhouse Edition" lol ) - The only thing I would want to see added to the series if you continue with it is a bit more of an overview of what is being done, how the system is laid out, the different parts of the system, etc..... (I dont think this explains what I really mean) ... maybe in the first episode you could have a graphic that gives an overhead view of how the original station did its job or what this work was aiming to achieve ... but maybe that's just a personal preference and I'm nit-picking... I think you did a WONDERFUL job and I hope you continue to make more great content in this series :D
amazing series! here's to hoping for more. I love all your videos. your style of presentation is above the rest... in a whole other level! again thank you for the great content
The most amazing thing of this series is having the contractor on board with being filmed all the time and the videos made public! Props to them for being confident in their work.
18 years an electrician and my current job has an automatic firing policy if your phone is seen out of your pocket, even to check the time, for security reasons. So yeah, very surprised. I've done 3 water treatment plants but no pumping stations. A lot of this was very familiar to me. Great series
As a long-time subscriber I'd like you to know that this was my favorite thing you've done to date. You did a really fantastic job. I would absolutely love to see more real world projects like this. I appreciate that you took advantage of your unique position to share this with the world. Keep up the good work.
I'll second these sentiments wholeheartedly. My interest in the engineering of civil projects like this one is intense, but not capable of withstanding the maths of most "explanations." You've done such a good job with this I feel I can't give enough praise. Whatever else you decide to treat in this manner will surely be a success.
This is the type of documentaries I really enjoyed as a kid, but seem to have disappeared. No fake drama, no bullshit, just pure information. Thank you so much for all your hard work. You continue to be one of my absolute favorite UA-cam channels.
I think anyone who made it to episode 5 can say they thoroughly enjoyed this series. While a second channel might sound like a good idea, I watched your 8 months of work in two days. I don't think content could keep up unless you had a separate team. Either way, your dream of watching a construction site is shared by many, and we look forward to watching much, much more. Thank you, Grady, and everyone behind the camera.
Speaking of, I was down by the Oshawa/Whitby Waterfront trail here in the GTA and got to see some of the Waste water treatment. Over here the seaguls really liking sitting around the spinny water things. I was joking with dad "Maybe they're pecking corn out of our poop"
This series was amazing. It is the latest proof that we don't need big cable channels and high-paid actors to produce highly compelling, informative, and entertaining shows. The world needs to see more episodes like this. We need to show the next generation that working jobs like this is pretty amazing. They can help make the world a better place.
I’m in the Water and Waste Water industry. I know for a fact your videos are shown to new grads and new employees to help familiarize themselves with different aspects of the water cycle/system. Fantastic content.
Sad to see this series to end, one of the best documentary projects here. Everything was so interesting and we got nice explanation for it. Really liked it, i hope you get the opportunity to make more of these
I too hope more like this will follow on other projects, especially now that this first series proves the concept. And besides, having the series end as planned is better than having "Episode 15: Dealing with a fallen crane and pump equipment reclamation"
I work in IT and one of our customers is a local river authority. About a year or so ago I got to go on site to the 7.5 MW hydroelectric power plant in order to troubleshoot remote access to their SCADA unit. I was hardcore geeking out the entire time over all of the massive engineering in that facility, and I got all the pictures to show for it! And the entire time I was eagerly telling my hosts all about your channel! The plant I saw can produce up to 7.5 MW with flow rates up to 810 cubic feet PER SECOND. If you ever get the chance to do a Practical Construction series on hydroelectric power, PLEASE TAKE IT! And if you wanna see my local power plant sometime, hit me up, I might be able to arrange a tour. I'm not in Texas, but you might enjoy a vacation a little further north ;)
I work in IT too, but never touched SCADA systems. I'm honestly inspired to see how difficult it might be to retrain and do a bit of a sidestep in my career. I've mostly managed Windows servers, but I miss running cable and hardware with everything in datacentres these days.
@@nankinink it just means playing the long game ;) Also, in this case, the dam was preexisting, so the hydroelectric plant was an add-on and the plant itself could go up a bit faster than building an entire reservoir from scratch.
Loved the series!! It's my dream that folks like you replace the magic that Discovery and The History channels created but abandoned. Keep up the great work and I'm hoping more people like me appreciate your motives. Looking forward to the next series and learning more about how our world is built.
It is so important to a cohesive society that we all appreciate what each other does by getting to see some of the detail like this. This used to be a cornerstone of television entertainment both for children and adults alike; fantastic for inspiring the young. This benefit through this type of educational media goes mostly unappreciated and yet it is so important for increasing the levels of day to day respect between people and is a reminder to value our collective knowledge base. Thank you, Grady.
This was easily the best mini documentary series of the entire year! If you find any other opportunities like this one I am definitely going to watch that series.
Definitely my favorite series. You've grown into an incredible educator. It's rare to see jobs like this with the type of explanations you give. Great Job. Keep it up!
I work at Val-Matic, the company who supplied some of the plug and check valves on this project, and this is becoming a training tool for our new Sales Engineers. Haven’t sent anyone describe the construction of a plant as well as this series!
Love these, would love to have more - this is what TLC and Discovery channel used to be - super interesting deep dives into the world around us. I watched it growing up and I'm watching you as an adult. Really well done too, the editing and descriptions were perfect.
Loved this series. As an engineer and water/wastewater operator in Texas I have used this series to show friends and family what it is that I do. I have also used this series as a learning tool for interns and new to the industry employees. I would love to see the other heavy civil construction videos include water/wastewater plant work, drilling of a well, construction of an EST, roadwork from a design, bridge construction or repair, etc. LOVE YOUR WORK!!
My dad was a field technician for the local water company. He was the guy who'd drive out there at 3am when the red light starts flashing, with a pair of waders in the car just in case. He'd have loved how maintainably designed this station is!
I can never understand why the Shone system developed in the mid 19th century is not used today. With no moving parts on the water side (except the non return valves) many of these systems are still running today, after more than 100 years of 24/7 operation. They were developed when buildings in London (UK) were below the Thames, and hence the sewers. The houses of parliament, better known for Big Ben, were one of the early installations that is still running today. Between 1909 and 1026, they were incorporated into several London theatres. When I visited the Becton treatment plant, that has to lift the sewage from a sewer large enough to drive a single decker bus through, I explained them and they were gobsmacked at their simplicity and lack of any pumps. No one on the design team had even heard of the principal. If it is not something that you have come across, I am happy to explain it and how unbelievably simple and maintenance free it is by eliminating pumps that can block and wear.
Thanks for this series, Grady! I've been a water/wastewater process design engineer for 15 years, and it's really cool to see something I do every day documented for the world to see and understand a little bit better. More importantly, I hope many kids will see videos like this and get interested in pursuing careers in the design, construction and operation of civil infrastructure.
As soon as this series started I thought to myself (in Italian): “Finally a web series for ‘umarell’!”. It was so unexpected hearing the term cited in this video, and I was sooo pleased with it.
This series should be a required course in public school. So many people don't understand or appreciate modern infrastructure. And it would probably get a bunch of kids interested in engineering or other civil services.
Honestly, seeing an independent creator (you're not an education company and super well-funded) is absolutely phenomenal. This kind of thing should be absolutely shown in school, from hs/middle school and college for classes that are meant to expose people to complexities. Your script, editing, and information was amazing, and despite me being a web software developer, this was incredibly interesting and very easy to grok. Very well done, and I truly appreciate the authorities, contractors and workers for allowing you to film. Really. This is amazing work, and is some of the coolest content I've seen, and even goes against modern marvels. Absolutely invaluable work, and shows / commemorates all the hard work everybody puts into those kind of civil projects. I hope the individuals who allowed this to happen see this comment, and realize how impactful this kind of thing really is -- even for people not in the industry. I look forward to new series and learning about things that go unseen, and unappreciated by so many people.
(1) wow. I mean, just, wow. Impressed by so many things here. That Grady has scaled up (a team!) while staying so true to the style he established over years with practical engineering. That he is this counter-cultural: slow! Cheerful! Focused on the humble, crucial, easily overlooked (by us non-engineers) and intricately devised foundations of modern life. Not kidding when I say makes me optimistic about humanity that this kind of thing might be popular (or presumably popular enough to support the team making it) (2) every one of the fail safes and redundancies in this system made me think about what kind of mishaps errors and foul-smelling messes had to happen over the history of human wastewater management to get to the place where we take for granted the invisibility of the systems for sewage processing and transport. That could be a whole ‘nother channel :) Long time watcher (like, since the start) first time commenter, and, as a STEM educator, my hat’s off to you, Grady and Co. Bravi.
I've worked for an engineering firm (CDM Smith) for almost 2 decades, but in an IT support capacity. This series has been enlightening as it shows what my co-workers do every day to plan and install such systems around the world.
This series has been extremely satisfying, I hope you'll continue! There has to be a more efficient way to get all this done. I feel like manufacturing the wells as single pieces, with plumbing connections included, would save weeks and millions of dollars.
Although I like the idea... I don't think this solution would be cheap for all the different types of infrastructure. It's a lot cheaper to make a lot of the same pipe in a factory vs making specific, custom-made wells
you underestimate the cost of hiring a custom haul truck to move something that is too big to haul over the road. and the cost of renting a crane big enough to lift that entire thing all at once. you're talking about weeks in transit and millions of dollars in transit costs.
@@kenbrown2808 The other day I saw a convoy of way oversized stuff and they had to have a police escort and like 20 lead vehicles/follower vehicles. The entire interstate was piling up behind them. I think they were carrying what looked like rocket parts potentially, large cylinders two end capes, and the cylinders had a lot of attachment points/small pipes. I only shudder at how much that must have cost.
Love to see the quality infrastructure that hard work produces! Thanks for giving us an inside scoop on all the details! I'd love to see more like this
@@marcteenhc9793 Cheaper for the same quality doesn't exist in the real world. It might on spreadsheets and specification lists. If a project is cheaper, its quality must suffer. Things don't get double checked or a slightly out of spec but still in compliance material is used. Safety margins aren't there for you so you can save money. They're there to keep you safe. Look to China to see what happens when you "save the taxpayers money." Do you think safety checks are done for free?
Beautifully done series. Honestly, this series will be a resource for many in years to come. Great for showing folks what happens with these products and how it all ties together into a much larger system. As an engineer in the municipal valve world it was cool to see the whole process continually, as you often only see bits of it in our position. Even if it was a competitors product installed. ;) Thanks for keeping a true and tied technology documentary art form alive.
Ive been in heavy construction for 18 years. Thank you for shedding light on us! What an amazing job you did making this mini series. By far my favorite as a long time subscriber. Everything from the production quality to the caliber of work put out by the contractors you filmed was absolutely outstanding. Much respect to everyone involved.
This is easily the coolest series on youtube. Its so in depth but also offers a macroscopic view of how urban utility development is always in a race to stay ahead of demand
About a year ago, I started welding stainless pipe for lift stations, but I've never seen how the parts I made are used. It is massively satisfying & fun to understand the full application and use of the things I make every day! This has been a great series, and I can't wait to see others like it.
I was the editor for 20 years cutting all the footage for a film crew that ran around shooting how to build and remodel houses. Yeah. Construction (and demo) crews tolerating nosey film crews are literal angels. Was good that our executive producer is a homebuilder himself so he knew all the pitfalls to expect with getting the story straight. I used to get VO hints he'd drop in the footage all the time. Saved me having to ask questions. That was an awesome series sir. Hope to see more.
I hope you make more of these in the future along with your usual content. Your channel has given me an appreciation for all the infrastructure around me that was previously unnoticed.
This was a fantastic series. I like that it's on the main Practical Engineering channel, but would also be fine with subscribing to a separate channel just for construction projects. From the editing to the music to your brilliant narration, this really has been a joy to watch. That it was done in 4K was a great bonus, thanks for that.
my husband is a land surveyor and hes really enjoyed the series so far! its been funny listening to his comments and perspectives on how yall do things compared to what he sees here in the DC/MD metro area 😂
This series' videos are among my favourite of the channel. I truly appreciate the slow pace and the attention to detail and care that has been put into. Congratulations!
I want to echo the previous comments. Especially Dork432. This is the best stuff in the world to watch. It makes me appreciate all the hard and yet critical little steps, like how they left the epoxy coating a bit short of the bottom of the wet well, then when all the pumps and stuff were indexed, bowled the bottom with concrete , then finished coating then installed the pumps and lines. The order of processes is so critical! Way to help us understand all the hundreds of processes that go into a project like this. I really hope you can find more projects to document.
I am an IT infrastructure engineering expert and my job is really stressful. I enjoy your videos so much because they feel so relaxing to me to watch and I am so obsessed by learning new things every minute of my life ^^ This series also taught me that civil engineering and IT infrastructure share the same ideas, I normally design highly available systems with full redundancy and it is so nice to see that this concept is also applied in the technology all around us ^^ Thank you Grady, please keep up doing such a great job!
Nothing makes me happier than to login to UA-cam and see a new video from Grady. This construction project was one of the best things he's done. I've watched plenty of construction documentaries but they usually focus on the architect and maybe briefly cover some of the bigger challenges faced during construction. They always leave me with a ton of unanswered questions about what's actually going on. It's so satisfying to actually learn about all the details during the show!
This was an incredible series!!! The water authority, the contractors, everyone, good work across the board! Public engagement like this is so important :)
Thanks for the good work in filming, editing and showing a side of our world we normally don't get a chance to see! Your videos give me such great appreciation for the things we take for granted, and is directly helping me develop my career too. Thank you!!
This has been a fabulous series. Yes, please, more of this would be very welcome. Actually, more of any of your content is welcome. I find this to be one of the most entertaining channels on UA-cam, and I can't get Nebula where I live, so restricting it there would mean I miss out on great stuff!
Random french watcher here. Greatly appreciated the series and would definitively love to see more on the channel (I think it does belong here and not on a separate one). As for the other questions I'm sorry I can't help further with that lol. Anyway Grady thanks again for all the work you've been putting on! This is definitively the most interesting channel about construction I've even found (and I've been watching for over 2 years now).
Great mini-series, Grady. I've always enjoyed your shortform videos, and was pleasantly surprised with how fun this series was. This semi-longform format is the perfect length to occupy time while still feeling fresh and light. Hope we get more of them.
The number of steps and the forethought behind every inch of pipe and every pound of concrete (and many different *kinds* of concrete) is nothing short of mind blowing. This is one of those parts of our modern life in an industrialized society to which 99.999% of us never give a second thought, and that absolutely 100% requires an extraordinary confluence of many engineers' and builders' expert knowledge to even be possible. In the case of an End Of The World As We Know It scenario, the survivors would need decades or even centuries to be able to build something like this again.
How do you do all this?!? It's always fascinating!! And sure, more of these in-depth videos would be super. Our Engineering in Plain Sight is a go-to for the family. And for my grandson and his family. Thank you, Grady!
awesome project. I hope to see much more of this in the future! If you ever think 3d animation would make the video better, don't hesitate to reach out for a little collab
Grady, I do industrial design, engineering, and construction for a living. Not only do I love what I do but your common sense approach to your videos helps me communicate to others what I do for a living. Now when I say that I’m an Engineer….they don’t ask what type of train I drive!!!!
Great video! As a potable water plant operator, the majority of your video is also incorporated on drinking water as well. SCADA, transducers and redundancy measures are extremely similar. Difference is we use powerful motors to extract water from underground aquifers and treated into clearwells where chemicals are added and sent out to community either by booster pumps or elevation tanks.
Absolutely fantastic, I’ve never been so excited about sewerage in all my life! I’d love to see more projects like this, I can’t believe how much you and your team have put into this I know it took you over five months, everything was very impressive and you make something complicated so easy to understand and very interesting, so let me say a huge thank you very much, and congratulations!!
Best series you’ve done, and really fascinating. The contractors were great sports letting you film the whole process, and an excellent job condensing a years worth of work in to these few episodes
This was fantastic! An idea for a future series: Construction of a Gas Station. I'm sure there is a lot involved in getting the tanks, pumps, lot, etc. put into place.
I find very entertaining and educational to see how a job construction sit works in a different country, as a fellow engeneering in Brasil I enjoyed wacthing this series. Keep up the good work. I happened to work on the construction of several lift stations here, so I was able to find different ways to do my day-to-day work. Thanks very much.
This has been such an enlightening and remarkably enjoyable series. I don't recall ever being excited to see another in a series on UA-cam -- and it's for a sewage pump station. Thank you for compiling this so we can appreciate the effort that goes into things we take for granted.
Loved this little series. Don't know if it belongs here or on another channel, but I would love to watch more of these. Kind of nuts just how much goes into something so simple.
It is great coming into my office and seeing the little hardhat pin that came with the Engineering in Plain Sight book stuck on the wall. Confirms I'm supporting the right channel - this series was a great watch and I can't wait for the next one.
Awesome series! Loved watching and learning about sophisticated infrastructure construction. As an german architect I am fascinated by the subject and also the difference in construction culture and standards. For a frist you really nailed the format, tone and style. Everything seemed effortless (although it surely wasn’t). I hope the work payed off, and I‘m looking forward for more. best Max
We thoroughly enjoyed this series. I am sure that this up-close view of our built environment will inspire more people to explore careers in construction and civil engineering, so I am pitching in in hopes that more of these series will be made. :)
This series was extremely well done, and totally has its place on an engineering channel. In future series, I'd love to see probably a tad more schematics about how the whole thing fits in the wider picture, and how all the things are interconnected, because being lost in the details of concrete pouring made me lose track of the bigger context. Basically, a bit more balance on explaining the "why" with the "how".
Grady as you know there is no shortage of engineers / engineering videos on UA-cam. But your narrating and your voice on top of your knowledge is miles ahead of anyone on this platform . Bravo sir bravo 👏
Your work is amazing on this series. Thank you so much for all the work you and your team put on this. I work in electric maintenance in water and sewer lift stations here in Brazil. Some parts of this new station are exactly the same as the stations where I work in Brazil, while others are very different. Here, for example, in many stations we only have float switches as a device to turn on the pumps, and the wet wells here are not covered with epoxy paint.
Amazing content, thanks goes out to you, and the whole construction team for allowing this construction to be documented. It's been an incredibly insightful series to watch
This presentation series was fantastic. I would like to see more similar presentations. I was a support worker operating heavy equipment on the same type of project and your presentation answered all of my questions so now I know exactly what I was working on. 😂
21:35 No, Grady. Huge Thanks goes to YOU for this masterpiece extraordinaire of a documentary! I'm not a citizen of the U.S. - I live in Europe - , but the process and all the details around wastewater moving / equipment redundancy / concrete slab pouring etc. shouldn't be too different elsewhere. I *binged* this five-parter, as I'm a huge fan of your channel! Keep going! (I also liked your occasional ~~presence~~ appearances on the Lateral Podcast😁)
Thanks for this trip down to memory lane. When I was backpacking Australia at the age of 24 I ended up working at the construction of a new sewage treatment plant in Port Douglas AU. Where the sewage enters the treatment plant there is a lift-station as well where I installed the pumps and pipes. I have awesome memories of that time. Love your channel giving Insights to civil engineering. But this series on the lift station in particular is special to me personally. Although I ended up in a totally different career I can advise anyone to get involved with this kind of engineering / construction. The idea that 24 years later I can zoom into google maps and see that site still being at service to the community of Port Douglas still gives me a good feeling. Despite the minor part that I played there.
This was fantastic content, I almost subscribed to Nebula to get it early which I might still do but I'd rather support you and this initiative directly! I'd imagine this series won't be frequent enough to merit it's own channel, but when that different theme music hit in the first episode I was so giddy it was ridiculous haha. Thank you Grady, and to the workers who were okay with this being video'd!
Surprisingly fascinating series. I'd love to see more projects like this, it's amazing how cool the team was with having a nosy film crew documenting everything. Here's hoping the success of this series inspires more in the future!
Thanks Grady, this has been a brilliant series. I have to admit that the term Umarell applies to me, as I'm retired and spent 18 months checking up nearly every day on a large wastewater overlay that was being installed down an main road near my house. They used micro-boring (pipe-jacking) so the road could stay open, and the day-to-day engineering of that project was incredibly interesting to this retired Telecoms engineer!
This was an amazing series of videos! I'm a technical drafter, and it's so easy to forget how much work is needed to bring the lines I draw on a sheet to life!
@@idjlesin the industrial world, those actually aren't very big pumps. I've seen 350HP pumps used to distribute chilled water for building cooling, and the actual chillers consumed nearly 2000HP, plus more 350HP pumps to pump hot water to the cooling towers, and the cooling towers all have 75-100HP fans. These also aren't run at 10-20% capacity normally like a car engine, they run near their full capacity for long periods of time. I saw meters in a paper mill once that estimated they spent at least $17,000 an hour on electricity, and they did not look like they'd been updated in a good long while either, and that's just from utilities. They also run their own power plant at the mill! TLDR: Don't worry, that lift station does not use that much power!
It'd be interesting to hook up a little 360 camera and GPS unit, send it down one of the lines and be able to follow it throughout the system (GPS + inertial tracking when it's unable to obtain a signal. There's also RF if someone were to walk along the surface to manually trace-out the path)
Most probably GPS and internet coverage will be quite poor through most of such journey. Unfortunately. Video footage might be interesting, but would require a lot of light and hope that it doesn't get stuck somewhere.
As evidenced by me being a month late, I haven't been keeping up with this series too much, but I genuinely think it may be one of my favorites on the channel. It's getting to be holiday season which is moderately stressful, and the sheer joy I felt remembering this series and coming back to finish it was a godsend. Your videos have a way of making me be able to just relax and enjoy learning and thinking about new things about engineering and infrastructure I would have never otherwise appreciated or, sometimes, even noticed. Also the vacuum + plastic bag trick made me laugh out loud and decide to offer my two cents because of how absolutely genius it was :) Thanks for the hours upon hours of wonderful content, Grady, and huge kudos to the contractors and workers allowing you to film something this in depth and educational!
I really appreciate this series and would love to see it continue. I worked as a commercial electrician in Houston and now I work with traffic systems in another state. Seeing how the trades affect people in their everyday life is a wonderful thing to me, so thank you and your team for doing such a great job.
Brilliant, for someone that is charged with cleaning these stations on a regular basis, it is great to see the design and construction side of this process. Keep up the great work.
My childhood memories of growing up on a sewage treatment plant where my dad worked as a maintenance supervisor. I loved every minute of it when I had the chance to go to work with my dad!!!
Huge thanks to everyone who made this possible! Producing this series was an adventure.
If you love infrastructure as much as I do, you might like my book or Infrastructure Road Trip Bingo (or both at a discount!): store.practical.engineering/
Now they just need some solar collectors, a camera and a battery to drive all the small stuff to be able to overbridge small power failures.
I LOVED this series!!! I REALLY hope you continue with it... and it ABSOLUTELY belongs on this channel!!! This is the end result of what the engineers start on paper, so it's part of the engineering process. ( perhaps the making of some of the parts that engineers require would also be a series for the future of the channel?? i.e. "How Its Made: Grady Hillhouse Edition" lol )
- The only thing I would want to see added to the series if you continue with it is a bit more of an overview of what is being done, how the system is laid out, the different parts of the system, etc..... (I dont think this explains what I really mean) ... maybe in the first episode you could have a graphic that gives an overhead view of how the original station did its job or what this work was aiming to achieve ... but maybe that's just a personal preference and I'm nit-picking... I think you did a WONDERFUL job and I hope you continue to make more great content in this series :D
Awesome series!! I would love to see more!
Brady,
How much did this installation cost?
amazing series! here's to hoping for more.
I love all your videos. your style of presentation is above the rest... in a whole other level!
again thank you for the great content
The most amazing thing of this series is having the contractor on board with being filmed all the time and the videos made public! Props to them for being confident in their work.
Right? Imagine doing a dumb thing by accident and having that exposed to the whole world forever 😂
@@TheNerogardenever heard of approval and editing
@@jayathranps1319 For sure. But not everybody will review the footage.. so that require a lot of trust by the engineers on site
MGC was such a good sport about this idea. They were terrific to work with.
18 years an electrician and my current job has an automatic firing policy if your phone is seen out of your pocket, even to check the time, for security reasons. So yeah, very surprised. I've done 3 water treatment plants but no pumping stations. A lot of this was very familiar to me. Great series
As a long-time subscriber I'd like you to know that this was my favorite thing you've done to date. You did a really fantastic job. I would absolutely love to see more real world projects like this. I appreciate that you took advantage of your unique position to share this with the world. Keep up the good work.
I'll second these sentiments wholeheartedly. My interest in the engineering of civil projects like this one is intense, but not capable of withstanding the maths of most "explanations." You've done such a good job with this I feel I can't give enough praise. Whatever else you decide to treat in this manner will surely be a success.
Absolutely. This has been such an informative and interesting series. Easily his best work.
Second
I have been subscribed for 2 years and i totally agree! Definately enjoyed this series! Do more of these if you get the opportunity
I second that
This is the type of documentaries I really enjoyed as a kid, but seem to have disappeared.
No fake drama, no bullshit, just pure information. Thank you so much for all your hard work.
You continue to be one of my absolute favorite UA-cam channels.
As in, a documentary. It's a shame how the idea of an actual documentary has been lost to many over time.
What?! You don't like the blippety-boop computer sounds on the Discovery channel and gadgety visual gimmicks?😮
I think anyone who made it to episode 5 can say they thoroughly enjoyed this series. While a second channel might sound like a good idea, I watched your 8 months of work in two days. I don't think content could keep up unless you had a separate team. Either way, your dream of watching a construction site is shared by many, and we look forward to watching much, much more. Thank you, Grady, and everyone behind the camera.
As a certified wastewater plant operator, I am just tickeld to see you present something I deal with daily. Thanks!
Turd herder.
Speaking of, I was down by the Oshawa/Whitby Waterfront trail here in the GTA and got to see some of the Waste water treatment.
Over here the seaguls really liking sitting around the spinny water things.
I was joking with dad "Maybe they're pecking corn out of our poop"
@nekomasteryoutube3232 could have been a clarifier, that is wastewater that has been screened so hopefully no corn in it. 🙂
May you spend many days dealing with the dry part, and few dealing with the wet part.
This series was amazing. It is the latest proof that we don't need big cable channels and high-paid actors to produce highly compelling, informative, and entertaining shows. The world needs to see more episodes like this. We need to show the next generation that working jobs like this is pretty amazing. They can help make the world a better place.
I’m in the Water and Waste Water industry. I know for a fact your videos are shown to new grads and new employees to help familiarize themselves with different aspects of the water cycle/system. Fantastic content.
Wow! That's amazing!
Sad to see this series to end, one of the best documentary projects here. Everything was so interesting and we got nice explanation for it. Really liked it, i hope you get the opportunity to make more of these
I too hope more like this will follow on other projects, especially now that this first series proves the concept. And besides, having the series end as planned is better than having "Episode 15: Dealing with a fallen crane and pump equipment reclamation"
I work in IT and one of our customers is a local river authority. About a year or so ago I got to go on site to the 7.5 MW hydroelectric power plant in order to troubleshoot remote access to their SCADA unit. I was hardcore geeking out the entire time over all of the massive engineering in that facility, and I got all the pictures to show for it! And the entire time I was eagerly telling my hosts all about your channel!
The plant I saw can produce up to 7.5 MW with flow rates up to 810 cubic feet PER SECOND.
If you ever get the chance to do a Practical Construction series on hydroelectric power, PLEASE TAKE IT!
And if you wanna see my local power plant sometime, hit me up, I might be able to arrange a tour. I'm not in Texas, but you might enjoy a vacation a little further north ;)
I work in IT too, but never touched SCADA systems. I'm honestly inspired to see how difficult it might be to retrain and do a bit of a sidestep in my career. I've mostly managed Windows servers, but I miss running cable and hardware with everything in datacentres these days.
Well, for a hydroelectric plant, the series might be out only in 5+ years if he starts filming right now... So this might be a bit out of reach 😅
@@nankinink it just means playing the long game ;) Also, in this case, the dam was preexisting, so the hydroelectric plant was an add-on and the plant itself could go up a bit faster than building an entire reservoir from scratch.
Loved the series!! It's my dream that folks like you replace the magic that Discovery and The History channels created but abandoned. Keep up the great work and I'm hoping more people like me appreciate your motives. Looking forward to the next series and learning more about how our world is built.
This is undoubtedly batter than a bunch of bickering "gold hunters"!
Modern Marvels, Wings, all of the WWII documentaries... so important and so completely unappreciated now.
Truly incredible series. Practical Engineering "single"-handedly revived an entire extinct genre of television.
Facts.
It is so important to a cohesive society that we all appreciate what each other does by getting to see some of the detail like this. This used to be a cornerstone of television entertainment both for children and adults alike; fantastic for inspiring the young. This benefit through this type of educational media goes mostly unappreciated and yet it is so important for increasing the levels of day to day respect between people and is a reminder to value our collective knowledge base. Thank you, Grady.
This was easily the best mini documentary series of the entire year! If you find any other opportunities like this one I am definitely going to watch that series.
Definitely my favorite series. You've grown into an incredible educator. It's rare to see jobs like this with the type of explanations you give. Great Job. Keep it up!
I agree 😊
I work at Val-Matic, the company who supplied some of the plug and check valves on this project, and this is becoming a training tool for our new Sales Engineers. Haven’t sent anyone describe the construction of a plant as well as this series!
I know you said this series hasn't been super popular by the numbers. But it has been my favorite you've done!
Love these, would love to have more - this is what TLC and Discovery channel used to be - super interesting deep dives into the world around us. I watched it growing up and I'm watching you as an adult. Really well done too, the editing and descriptions were perfect.
Honestly, this is better produced than those old documentaries. Great work here.
Reminds me of one of my favorite shows, “How its made”.
@@bobthecomputerguy they might been inferior but at least "on brand" and not repulsive Stuff today
Loved this series. As an engineer and water/wastewater operator in Texas I have used this series to show friends and family what it is that I do. I have also used this series as a learning tool for interns and new to the industry employees. I would love to see the other heavy civil construction videos include water/wastewater plant work, drilling of a well, construction of an EST, roadwork from a design, bridge construction or repair, etc. LOVE YOUR WORK!!
My dad was a field technician for the local water company. He was the guy who'd drive out there at 3am when the red light starts flashing, with a pair of waders in the car just in case. He'd have loved how maintainably designed this station is!
The endorsement fron an experienced person like 🎉 your dad always matters.
I can never understand why the Shone system developed in the mid 19th century is not used today. With no moving parts on the water side (except the non return valves) many of these systems are still running today, after more than 100 years of 24/7 operation. They were developed when buildings in London (UK) were below the Thames, and hence the sewers. The houses of parliament, better known for Big Ben, were one of the early installations that is still running today. Between 1909 and 1026, they were incorporated into several London theatres.
When I visited the Becton treatment plant, that has to lift the sewage from a sewer large enough to drive a single decker bus through, I explained them and they were gobsmacked at their simplicity and lack of any pumps. No one on the design team had even heard of the principal.
If it is not something that you have come across, I am happy to explain it and how unbelievably simple and maintenance free it is by eliminating pumps that can block and wear.
Thanks for this series, Grady! I've been a water/wastewater process design engineer for 15 years, and it's really cool to see something I do every day documented for the world to see and understand a little bit better. More importantly, I hope many kids will see videos like this and get interested in pursuing careers in the design, construction and operation of civil infrastructure.
As soon as this series started I thought to myself (in Italian): “Finally a web series for ‘umarell’!”. It was so unexpected hearing the term cited in this video, and I was sooo pleased with it.
This series should be a required course in public school. So many people don't understand or appreciate modern infrastructure. And it would probably get a bunch of kids interested in engineering or other civil services.
Honestly, seeing an independent creator (you're not an education company and super well-funded) is absolutely phenomenal.
This kind of thing should be absolutely shown in school, from hs/middle school and college for classes that are meant to expose people to complexities.
Your script, editing, and information was amazing, and despite me being a web software developer, this was incredibly interesting and very easy to grok. Very well done, and I truly appreciate the authorities, contractors and workers for allowing you to film. Really. This is amazing work, and is some of the coolest content I've seen, and even goes against modern marvels.
Absolutely invaluable work, and shows / commemorates all the hard work everybody puts into those kind of civil projects. I hope the individuals who allowed this to happen see this comment, and realize how impactful this kind of thing really is -- even for people not in the industry. I look forward to new series and learning about things that go unseen, and unappreciated by so many people.
(1) wow. I mean, just, wow. Impressed by so many things here. That Grady has scaled up (a team!) while staying so true to the style he established over years with practical engineering. That he is this counter-cultural: slow! Cheerful! Focused on the humble, crucial, easily overlooked (by us non-engineers) and intricately devised foundations of modern life. Not kidding when I say makes me optimistic about humanity that this kind of thing might be popular (or presumably popular enough to support the team making it)
(2) every one of the fail safes and redundancies in this system made me think about what kind of mishaps errors and foul-smelling messes had to happen over the history of human wastewater management to get to the place where we take for granted the invisibility of the systems for sewage processing and transport. That could be a whole ‘nother channel :)
Long time watcher (like, since the start) first time commenter, and, as a STEM educator, my hat’s off to you, Grady and Co. Bravi.
Thanks for the kind words!
Thank you Grady and everyone involved, this was pure joy to watch! I hope you get to do this a whole lot more, and can't wait to see it!
I've worked for an engineering firm (CDM Smith) for almost 2 decades, but in an IT support capacity. This series has been enlightening as it shows what my co-workers do every day to plan and install such systems around the world.
This series has been extremely satisfying, I hope you'll continue! There has to be a more efficient way to get all this done. I feel like manufacturing the wells as single pieces, with plumbing connections included, would save weeks and millions of dollars.
Although I like the idea... I don't think this solution would be cheap for all the different types of infrastructure.
It's a lot cheaper to make a lot of the same pipe in a factory vs making specific, custom-made wells
@@mrping2603 I also feel like the separate-piece construction could deal with settlement, seismic events, etc better
Lots of smaller lift stations come prebuilt like you said, but not at this scale. It took 6 semi trucks just to deliver the wet well segments!
you underestimate the cost of hiring a custom haul truck to move something that is too big to haul over the road. and the cost of renting a crane big enough to lift that entire thing all at once. you're talking about weeks in transit and millions of dollars in transit costs.
@@kenbrown2808 The other day I saw a convoy of way oversized stuff and they had to have a police escort and like 20 lead vehicles/follower vehicles. The entire interstate was piling up behind them. I think they were carrying what looked like rocket parts potentially, large cylinders two end capes, and the cylinders had a lot of attachment points/small pipes. I only shudder at how much that must have cost.
Love to see the quality infrastructure that hard work produces! Thanks for giving us an inside scoop on all the details! I'd love to see more like this
You forgot to ask the cost! ;-)
@@marcteenhc9793Cheap isn't good. Good isn't cheap.
@@pootispiker2866 Cheaper for the same quality is always better. Specially if tax-payers' money is involved.
@@marcteenhc9793 Cheaper for the same quality doesn't exist in the real world. It might on spreadsheets and specification lists. If a project is cheaper, its quality must suffer. Things don't get double checked or a slightly out of spec but still in compliance material is used.
Safety margins aren't there for you so you can save money. They're there to keep you safe. Look to China to see what happens when you "save the taxpayers money." Do you think safety checks are done for free?
Beautifully done series. Honestly, this series will be a resource for many in years to come. Great for showing folks what happens with these products and how it all ties together into a much larger system. As an engineer in the municipal valve world it was cool to see the whole process continually, as you often only see bits of it in our position. Even if it was a competitors product installed. ;) Thanks for keeping a true and tied technology documentary art form alive.
Ive been in heavy construction for 18 years. Thank you for shedding light on us! What an amazing job you did making this mini series. By far my favorite as a long time subscriber. Everything from the production quality to the caliber of work put out by the contractors you filmed was absolutely outstanding. Much respect to everyone involved.
This is easily the coolest series on youtube. Its so in depth but also offers a macroscopic view of how urban utility development is always in a race to stay ahead of demand
A whole year to make 5 episodes! I appreciate the dedication you have to this new series!
About a year ago, I started welding stainless pipe for lift stations, but I've never seen how the parts I made are used. It is massively satisfying & fun to understand the full application and use of the things I make every day! This has been a great series, and I can't wait to see others like it.
I was the editor for 20 years cutting all the footage for a film crew that ran around shooting how to build and remodel houses. Yeah. Construction (and demo) crews tolerating nosey film crews are literal angels. Was good that our executive producer is a homebuilder himself so he knew all the pitfalls to expect with getting the story straight. I used to get VO hints he'd drop in the footage all the time. Saved me having to ask questions.
That was an awesome series sir. Hope to see more.
I hope you make more of these in the future along with your usual content. Your channel has given me an appreciation for all the infrastructure around me that was previously unnoticed.
This was a fantastic series. I like that it's on the main Practical Engineering channel, but would also be fine with subscribing to a separate channel just for construction projects. From the editing to the music to your brilliant narration, this really has been a joy to watch. That it was done in 4K was a great bonus, thanks for that.
my husband is a land surveyor and hes really enjoyed the series so far! its been funny listening to his comments and perspectives on how yall do things compared to what he sees here in the DC/MD metro area 😂
This series' videos are among my favourite of the channel. I truly appreciate the slow pace and the attention to detail and care that has been put into. Congratulations!
I want to echo the previous comments. Especially Dork432. This is the best stuff in the world to watch. It makes me appreciate all the hard and yet critical little steps, like how they left the epoxy coating a bit short of the bottom of the wet well, then when all the pumps and stuff were indexed, bowled the bottom with concrete , then finished coating then installed the pumps and lines. The order of processes is so critical! Way to help us understand all the hundreds of processes that go into a project like this. I really hope you can find more projects to document.
I am an IT infrastructure engineering expert and my job is really stressful. I enjoy your videos so much because they feel so relaxing to me to watch and I am so obsessed by learning new things every minute of my life ^^ This series also taught me that civil engineering and IT infrastructure share the same ideas, I normally design highly available systems with full redundancy and it is so nice to see that this concept is also applied in the technology all around us ^^ Thank you Grady, please keep up doing such a great job!
Nothing makes me happier than to login to UA-cam and see a new video from Grady. This construction project was one of the best things he's done. I've watched plenty of construction documentaries but they usually focus on the architect and maybe briefly cover some of the bigger challenges faced during construction. They always leave me with a ton of unanswered questions about what's actually going on. It's so satisfying to actually learn about all the details during the show!
This was an incredible series!!! The water authority, the contractors, everyone, good work across the board! Public engagement like this is so important :)
Thank you for the series! There's nothing more pleasing than watching people who know what they're doing being functional and useful af.
My cat watched the whole video with me from the coffee table. 10/10 video ❤❤❤
Thanks for the good work in filming, editing and showing a side of our world we normally don't get a chance to see!
Your videos give me such great appreciation for the things we take for granted, and is directly helping me develop my career too.
Thank you!!
The way the pumps are installed and so easily serviced is amazing. Love when things are designed for smooth maintenance from the start.
How exactly do those work? I couldn't really figure out where the water goes through them
This has been a fabulous series. Yes, please, more of this would be very welcome. Actually, more of any of your content is welcome. I find this to be one of the most entertaining channels on UA-cam, and I can't get Nebula where I live, so restricting it there would mean I miss out on great stuff!
The scale of these projects is fascinating. Thanks for creating this, would like to see more.
Random french watcher here. Greatly appreciated the series and would definitively love to see more on the channel (I think it does belong here and not on a separate one). As for the other questions I'm sorry I can't help further with that lol. Anyway Grady thanks again for all the work you've been putting on! This is definitively the most interesting channel about construction I've even found (and I've been watching for over 2 years now).
The way they snaked that wire with the vacuum and bag was so clever!
This series was fantastic and I absolutely want to see more. I don't think it needs a separate channel at all really.
Absolutely fantastic series! Every time I go on break, I sit in my car and watch. Please keep this series alive, man!
Great mini-series, Grady. I've always enjoyed your shortform videos, and was pleasantly surprised with how fun this series was. This semi-longform format is the perfect length to occupy time while still feeling fresh and light. Hope we get more of them.
Watching this series from Northern Ireland. Thoroughly enjoyed it and looking forward to a similar series in the future.
The number of steps and the forethought behind every inch of pipe and every pound of concrete (and many different *kinds* of concrete) is nothing short of mind blowing.
This is one of those parts of our modern life in an industrialized society to which 99.999% of us never give a second thought, and that absolutely 100% requires an extraordinary confluence of many engineers' and builders' expert knowledge to even be possible.
In the case of an End Of The World As We Know It scenario, the survivors would need decades or even centuries to be able to build something like this again.
Thank you Grady and everyone who helped make the series happen. what an eye opening series
How do you do all this?!? It's always fascinating!! And sure, more of these in-depth videos would be super. Our Engineering in Plain Sight is a go-to for the family. And for my grandson and his family. Thank you, Grady!
awesome project. I hope to see much more of this in the future!
If you ever think 3d animation would make the video better, don't hesitate to reach out for a little collab
Those 3d animations are amazing to see and explain hard stuff really easily especially the plane one.
Grady, I do industrial design, engineering, and construction for a living. Not only do I love what I do but your common sense approach to your videos helps me communicate to others what I do for a living. Now when I say that I’m an Engineer….they don’t ask what type of train I drive!!!!
Great video! As a potable water plant operator, the majority of your video is also incorporated on drinking water as well. SCADA, transducers and redundancy measures are extremely similar. Difference is we use powerful motors to extract water from underground aquifers and treated into clearwells where chemicals are added and sent out to community either by booster pumps or elevation tanks.
Absolutely fantastic, I’ve never been so excited about sewerage in all my life! I’d love to see more projects like this, I can’t believe how much you and your team have put into this I know it took you over five months, everything was very impressive and you make something complicated so easy to understand and very interesting, so let me say a huge thank you very much, and congratulations!!
Best series you’ve done, and really fascinating. The contractors were great sports letting you film the whole process, and an excellent job condensing a years worth of work in to these few episodes
Such a great series! Civil infrastructure is so under-appreciated and you are helping bring it to the forefront. Please make more of these!
This was fantastic! An idea for a future series: Construction of a Gas Station. I'm sure there is a lot involved in getting the tanks, pumps, lot, etc. put into place.
Including screens and seals to prevent leakage of fluids into the ground.
I find very entertaining and educational to see how a job construction sit works in a different country, as a fellow engeneering in Brasil I enjoyed wacthing this series. Keep up the good work. I happened to work on the construction of several lift stations here, so I was able to find different ways to do my day-to-day work. Thanks very much.
This has been such an enlightening and remarkably enjoyable series. I don't recall ever being excited to see another in a series on UA-cam -- and it's for a sewage pump station. Thank you for compiling this so we can appreciate the effort that goes into things we take for granted.
Loved this little series. Don't know if it belongs here or on another channel, but I would love to watch more of these. Kind of nuts just how much goes into something so simple.
Awesome series, would love to see more!
It is great coming into my office and seeing the little hardhat pin that came with the Engineering in Plain Sight book stuck on the wall. Confirms I'm supporting the right channel - this series was a great watch and I can't wait for the next one.
YES I wanna see more of this, I've always loved watching construction, PLEASE make more of these! My favorite series on the channel!
Awesome series! Loved watching and learning about sophisticated infrastructure construction. As an german architect I am fascinated by the subject and also the difference in construction culture and standards. For a frist you really nailed the format, tone and style. Everything seemed effortless (although it surely wasn’t). I hope the work payed off, and I‘m looking forward for more.
best Max
We thoroughly enjoyed this series. I am sure that this up-close view of our built environment will inspire more people to explore careers in construction and civil engineering, so I am pitching in in hopes that more of these series will be made. :)
This series was extremely well done, and totally has its place on an engineering channel. In future series, I'd love to see probably a tad more schematics about how the whole thing fits in the wider picture, and how all the things are interconnected, because being lost in the details of concrete pouring made me lose track of the bigger context. Basically, a bit more balance on explaining the "why" with the "how".
Grady as you know there is no shortage of engineers / engineering videos on UA-cam. But your narrating and your voice on top of your knowledge is miles ahead of anyone on this platform . Bravo sir bravo 👏
Your work is amazing on this series. Thank you so much for all the work you and your team put on this.
I work in electric maintenance in water and sewer lift stations here in Brazil. Some parts of this new station are exactly the same as the stations where I work in Brazil, while others are very different. Here, for example, in many stations we only have float switches as a device to turn on the pumps, and the wet wells here are not covered with epoxy paint.
Amazing content, thanks goes out to you, and the whole construction team for allowing this construction to be documented. It's been an incredibly insightful series to watch
This presentation series was fantastic. I would like to see more similar presentations. I was a support worker operating heavy equipment on the same type of project and your presentation answered all of my questions so now I know exactly what I was working on. 😂
Amazing series and super thankful to everyone involved for allowing this to happen!
21:35 No, Grady. Huge Thanks goes to YOU for this masterpiece extraordinaire of a documentary! I'm not a citizen of the U.S. - I live in Europe - , but the process and all the details around wastewater moving / equipment redundancy / concrete slab pouring etc. shouldn't be too different elsewhere.
I *binged* this five-parter, as I'm a huge fan of your channel! Keep going!
(I also liked your occasional ~~presence~~ appearances on the Lateral Podcast😁)
Thanks for this trip down to memory lane.
When I was backpacking Australia at the age of 24 I ended up working at the construction of a new sewage treatment plant in Port Douglas AU.
Where the sewage enters the treatment plant there is a lift-station as well where I installed the pumps and pipes.
I have awesome memories of that time.
Love your channel giving Insights to civil engineering. But this series on the lift station in particular is special to me personally.
Although I ended up in a totally different career I can advise anyone to get involved with this kind of engineering / construction.
The idea that 24 years later I can zoom into google maps and see that site still being at service to the community of Port Douglas still gives me a good feeling. Despite the minor part that I played there.
Your consistency to shoot this construction from scratch is awesome 👍
This was fantastic content, I almost subscribed to Nebula to get it early which I might still do but I'd rather support you and this initiative directly! I'd imagine this series won't be frequent enough to merit it's own channel, but when that different theme music hit in the first episode I was so giddy it was ridiculous haha. Thank you Grady, and to the workers who were okay with this being video'd!
Surprisingly fascinating series. I'd love to see more projects like this, it's amazing how cool the team was with having a nosy film crew documenting everything. Here's hoping the success of this series inspires more in the future!
Thanks Grady, this has been a brilliant series. I have to admit that the term Umarell applies to me, as I'm retired and spent 18 months checking up nearly every day on a large wastewater overlay that was being installed down an main road near my house. They used micro-boring (pipe-jacking) so the road could stay open, and the day-to-day engineering of that project was incredibly interesting to this retired Telecoms engineer!
This was an amazing series of videos! I'm a technical drafter, and it's so easy to forget how much work is needed to bring the lines I draw on a sheet to life!
Wastewater lift stations are like the repeater amplifiers of wastewater...they increase the potential of wastewater to in can reach the right place!
The bag in the conduit is a great idea for running the wires. Separate of that, kind of sad seeing how developed the land is becoming.
And how car-centric it all is. And knowing how much energy is required to pump this sewage up - how utterly wasteful we humans are.
@@idjles100kW with 2 pumps running is certainly a lot of power but compared to how wasteful other things are, it's not comparable.
The bag on the string is called a mouse, and the trick has been passed down by generations of electricians.
@@idjleswould you rather we didn’t pump it?
@@idjlesin the industrial world, those actually aren't very big pumps. I've seen 350HP pumps used to distribute chilled water for building cooling, and the actual chillers consumed nearly 2000HP, plus more 350HP pumps to pump hot water to the cooling towers, and the cooling towers all have 75-100HP fans. These also aren't run at 10-20% capacity normally like a car engine, they run near their full capacity for long periods of time. I saw meters in a paper mill once that estimated they spent at least $17,000 an hour on electricity, and they did not look like they'd been updated in a good long while either, and that's just from utilities. They also run their own power plant at the mill!
TLDR: Don't worry, that lift station does not use that much power!
It'd be interesting to hook up a little 360 camera and GPS unit, send it down one of the lines and be able to follow it throughout the system
(GPS + inertial tracking when it's unable to obtain a signal. There's also RF if someone were to walk along the surface to manually trace-out the path)
I'm not sure I want to see what a camera might show in a sewer pipe. 💩
Most probably GPS and internet coverage will be quite poor through most of such journey. Unfortunately. Video footage might be interesting, but would require a lot of light and hope that it doesn't get stuck somewhere.
Do people think GPS is magic?
GPS needs view of the sky, so better to have an inertial tracking unit to map that journey;-)
The pump would grind it to pieces
Great series Grady. I'm getting old, but never too old to learn something new.
Excellent. Very entertaining.
Suggestion for future series - an annual maintenance shutdown on a petrochemical plant.
As evidenced by me being a month late, I haven't been keeping up with this series too much, but I genuinely think it may be one of my favorites on the channel. It's getting to be holiday season which is moderately stressful, and the sheer joy I felt remembering this series and coming back to finish it was a godsend. Your videos have a way of making me be able to just relax and enjoy learning and thinking about new things about engineering and infrastructure I would have never otherwise appreciated or, sometimes, even noticed.
Also the vacuum + plastic bag trick made me laugh out loud and decide to offer my two cents because of how absolutely genius it was :) Thanks for the hours upon hours of wonderful content, Grady, and huge kudos to the contractors and workers allowing you to film something this in depth and educational!
Great job. Congratulations from Kazakhstan. So much efforts for things are usual in every day life.
Thank you for explaining moments.
I really appreciate this series and would love to see it continue.
I worked as a commercial electrician in Houston and now I work with traffic systems in another state.
Seeing how the trades affect people in their everyday life is a wonderful thing to me, so thank you and your team for doing such a great job.
The complexity of common services we take for granted is mind-boggling
Brilliant, for someone that is charged with cleaning these stations on a regular basis, it is great to see the design and construction side of this process. Keep up the great work.
Excellent series, thank you. Highlighting the hidden critical workers and systems that keep civilization functioning.
My childhood memories of growing up on a sewage treatment plant where my dad worked as a maintenance supervisor. I loved every minute of it when I had the chance to go to work with my dad!!!
That station is a work of art❤
Baaaaaabe! New episode of HEAVY CONSTRUCTION dropped! Get the popcorn!
An engineer that's in touch with the physical side of things is always a blessing