Replacing a drainage riser is one of the most socially difficult jobs in an Israeli multi-unit building: it affects every apartment above and below, needs a Vaad Bayit vote, and requires access into several neighbors' homes. Still, when the old cast iron is leaking, rusting or clogging — delay is expensive: one sewage flood between floors costs tens of thousands of ILS in neighbor repairs.
When the riser really needs to go
Clear technical signs
- Through-wall corrosion of cast iron. In buildings from the 1960s–80s the inside of cast-iron risers scales up and the wall thins. Rust streaks, pinhole leaks and a sewer smell between floors are the markers.
- Recurring clogs on the lower floors. If the first two floors clog every 3–6 months despite normal use, the riser is 60–80% reduced by deposits.
- Leaks into the slab. Dark patches on your downstairs neighbor's ceiling and a sewage smell in dead cavities mean the riser is leaking into the concrete.
- Cracked hubs. Cast-iron hubs packed with lead and oakum lose tightness after 40–50 years, especially after seismic movement.
- Gurgling on flush. If your toilet "sucks" when a neighbor above flushes, the vent stack is partially compromised.
When full replacement is not needed
- The defect is local — one hub on one floor.
- The cast iron is intact; the clog was a one-off after a renovation (plaster, tile adhesive).
- The problem is in the apartment's horizontal branch, not the vertical riser.
Why it is a headache in a בית משותף
The sewer riser is shared property (רכוש משותף). Under the Israeli condominium law, works on shared systems are decided at a house meeting and funded by the Vaad Bayit. In practice that means:
- A Vaad Bayit vote is needed — simple majority for routine work, 2/3 for larger jobs.
- Access to every apartment on the stack is mandatory — the riser passes 2–3 m through your unit but must be replaced from the basement to the roof.
- If even one neighbor refuses, the works stall. It is resolved through the מפקח על הבתים המשותפים (condominium supervisor) or a mediator.
- Drainage is off across the stack for 1–3 days — inconvenient for every household.
Materials: cast iron, polypropylene, HDPE
Modern cast iron (SML / MA)
Seamless cast iron with an epoxy lining — the premium option, popular in high-end Tel Aviv and Herzliya buildings.
- Pros: quiet (the mass damps the flush), fire-safe, service life 80+ years.
- Cons: expensive (3–4× plastic), heavy, needs a skilled installer.
- Material cost: 250–450 ILS per meter of DN110 pipe plus fittings.
Polypropylene — Wavin, Pipelife
The most common replacement material in Israel since 2000. Silent grades include Wavin AS+ and Pipelife Master 3.
- Pros: quick hub-and-gasket assembly, light, corrosion-proof, affordable.
- Cons: standard PP transmits flush noise — you hear neighbors at night. Silent grades or mineral-wool wrap solve it.
- Material cost: 50–110 ILS per meter DN110 (standard PP) or 90–180 ILS (silent).
HDPE (high-density polyethylene)
Geberit, Wavin Acoustic. Joints are butt-welded or electrofused. The standard for commercial buildings and towers.
- Pros: monolithic welded joints (no gasket leak risk), very long life (100+ years), tolerates temperature swings.
- Cons: requires welding gear and a certified installer; fittings are pricey.
- Material cost: 120–220 ILS per meter DN110 plus 40–80 ILS per weld.
Order of works
- Inspection and diagnosis. The plumber walks the stack top to bottom, ideally with a pipe camera (צילום וידאו לצנרת), and grades the wear.
- Quote and technical proposal for the Vaad Bayit: materials, phases, duration, cost, how access is arranged.
- House meeting. Vote, minutes, funding (often from the קרן תחזוקה maintenance fund).
- Municipal coordination — usually not required if diameter and tie-in point to the city sewer do not change. Major changes trigger an inspector's approval.
- Apartment prep. Each household clears the area around the stack (usually bathroom or kitchen) and covers furniture.
- Demolition. Top to bottom, with temporary plugs at every floor. Cast iron is cut with an angle grinder or diamond saw.
- New riser install. Pipe by pipe, with expansion compensators every two floors and a vent stack through the roof.
- Branch reconnection. Each apartment's horizontal line is tied back to the new riser through tees at the correct fall.
- Testing. Water pour from the top, joint tightness check and vent draw verification.
- Shaft finish. Access closure, plaster, tiles, access covers on every floor.
Timeline
- Riser in a 4-story building — 2–4 working days, assuming every apartment grants access.
- Riser in an 8-story tower — 5–10 days, including floor-by-floor assembly.
- With finishing works (tiles, plaster in the shafts) — add 2–5 days.
- Vaad coordination and vote — 1–3 months; this is the longest phase.
- Drainage off — 1 to 3 days; domestic water usually stays on, but residents must not use the drains.
How much it costs in Israel
- 4-story riser, PP Wavin DN110 — 7,000–14,000 ILS per stack (labor + material).
- Same in silent PP (Wavin AS+ / Master 3) — 10,000–18,000 ILS.
- 4-story riser in SML cast iron — 18,000–30,000 ILS.
- 8-story riser in welded HDPE — 25,000–55,000 ILS.
- Access covers per floor — 150–400 ILS each.
- Tile reinstatement in the shaft — 300–900 ILS per apartment.
- Pre-work video inspection — 400–900 ILS.
- Engineer / supervisor fee (for complex buildings) — 1,500–4,000 ILS.
Per apartment in a 4-story building the share is roughly 2,000–5,000 ILS; over a 40–50 year service life that works out to 50–120 ILS per year.
Standards and regulations
- ת"י 1205.3 — the main Israeli standard for internal sanitary systems, including vertical stacks.
- ת"י 1205.0 — general requirements for drainage systems, including venting.
- Residential riser diameter — minimum DN110 (4") to accept toilets and kitchen drains.
- Vent stack — mandatory to roof, at least 200 mm above roof surface and clear of windows and ventilation intakes.
- Expansion compensators — mandatory on PP every 1.5–2 floors; on HDPE per the manufacturer's calculation.
- Plumber license — shared-system works must be performed by an אינסטלטור מוסמך.
Tips for the client
- Start with a video inspection. 500 ILS of camera footage convinces Vaad Bayit skeptics far better than words.
- Get the vote on paper. Signed minutes protect against future disputes about cost sharing.
- Replace the whole riser, not a segment. A one-floor saving comes back as repeat works in 2–3 years.
- Swap the water riser at the same time. If the shaft is open, doing both verticals in one go is cheaper.
- Choose silent materials. 10–15% more cost, 20 more years of quiet nights vs standard PP.
- Insist on access covers. One per floor is required by the standard and essential for future service.
- Photo-document before and after. Preserves neighborly relations and protects the contractor from false damage claims.
Typical mistakes
- "We'll only replace our section." Differences in diameter or material between floors create steps that catch debris.
- Skipping the vent stack. Without a roof vent the stack gurgles, traps suck dry and odor enters apartments.
- Poor acoustic insulation. Standard PP without mineral wool or silent grade guarantees complaints about every nighttime flush upstairs.
- No expansion joints. PP "works" with temperature and cracks at the hubs within 5–7 years.
- No written Vaad approval. A neighbor later refuses to pay and the dispute drags on for years.
- DIY without a license. The work will not be covered by the building insurance if something fails.
FAQ
How long does a cast-iron riser usually last in an Israeli building?
In the humid coastal belt (Tel Aviv, Haifa, Netanya) decent 1970s cast iron serves 45–60 years before critical corrosion. In dry areas (Jerusalem, Beer Sheva) 60–80 years. If the building is over 40 years old and the riser has never been changed, it is time for a diagnostic.
What if one neighbor refuses to grant access?
Start with conversation — explaining that replacement prevents a future flood in their own unit often works. If it does not, a case is opened with the מפקח על הבתים המשותפים (condominium supervisor) together with technical evidence and the Vaad minutes. As a last resort, a court order for access is almost always granted.
Can we reline the riser (CIPP) instead of replacing it?
Cured-in-place pipe is used in Israel but mostly on municipal mains and commercial buildings. On a residential DN110 stack it often costs more than replacement, needs specialized rigs and is not offered by every contractor. It saves time (one day instead of five) but shrinks the diameter and complicates future tie-ins.
How is the cost split between residents?
By default, in proportion to the share in the common property — usually equal shares among apartments on the stack. Funds are collected by the Vaad Bayit, often through the existing קרן תחזוקה. Residents without cash get an installment plan; refusal to pay for shared maintenance can be enforced through the courts.
Does the municipality need to approve an internal riser replacement?
If you replace material and diameter one-to-one and do not touch the tie-in to the city sewer, municipal approval is usually not needed, but the licensed plumber must follow ת"י 1205.3. Diameter changes, a different vent route or an external riser on the facade do require coordination and sometimes an engineer's approval.