Richard White
Senior Member
Oops.
Residents of a massive downtown condominium complex awoke Saturday morning to news that their building may not have water for several weeks.
In an email sent to tenants of the Aura building early Saturday morning, the building’s management confirmed that a broken water line shut down the water in the 80-storey building near Yonge and Gerrard streets at around 2 a.m.
“Low pressure levels from city side has caused booster pumps to cease,” the email, which was sent to residents at around 4 a.m., said. “These pumps are unique and specially designed for Aura.”
While the email noted that the repair process would take at least seven weeks, management did not provide a timeline for how long residents can expect to be without water.
https://www.cp24.com/news/residents...ay-not-have-water-for-several-weeks-1.4783348
I am not surprised. I work at the Residences of Maple Leaf Square and I can tell you first hand that Booster Pumps while necessary are very finicky. If you have low water pressure in the building and the pumps keep running eventually they will burn out.
When you shut the water off to an entire condo building you need to turn off the booster pumps otherwise they continuously run and with no water supplied to the pumps they will burn out.
What likely happened was when the water main broke, nobody shut off the pumps and they ended up burning out. They are heavy duty machinery and not something you can get at home depot or lowes. Weeks to replace it seems normal.