Live from East: Drainage - From Afterthought to Food Plant Priority

Legacy drainage systems often mask serious sanitation and structural risks. A PACK EXPO East Innovation Stage outlined actionable steps to help processors minimize risk, maintenance burden, and downtime.

Installing drainage-cleaning solutions now can help facilities avoid costly, often crippling downtime later.
Installing drainage-cleaning solutions now can help facilities avoid costly, often crippling downtime later.

The days of drainage being nothing more than concrete-embedded infrastructure have passed, according to Viking Kristjansson, VP of sales engineering & channel development at Global Drain Technologies at PACK EXPO East’s Innovation Stage. It is a critical, sanitary, inspectable system, one that directly impacts food safety, worker safety, and long-term operational reliability.

Kristjansson presented a strong argument that many facilities still treat drainage as an afterthought, especially older plants. The consequence? Sanitation hazards, structural decay, and expensive underground failures. He cited industry research showing that a significant number of positive bacterial swabs in food plants can be linked to floors and drains, highlighting their vital role in hygienic design.

Hidden risks beneath the floor

While visible drain damage like broken grates, chipped floor coatings, and improper slopes pose immediate safety and sanitation risks, Kristjansson emphasized that the real problem lies hidden underground. Many older facilities still use cast iron piping installed 40 to 50 years ago, far beyond its expected lifespan. Exposure to modern sanitation chemicals, hot caustics, and aggressive CIP (clean-in-place) processes speeds up deterioration. This can lead to pipe collapse, voids beneath slabs, restricted flow, and in worst cases, catastrophic floor failures.

To make matters worse, repairing underground drainage in a food facility often requires disruptive tear-outs. This requires a full plant shutdown, which few processors can afford operationally

Poor designs compound the problem

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