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Hydraulics guide

Hydraulic works, sanitation, and potable water in San Juan

Water and sanitation are critical infrastructure. A well-designed hydraulic project improves public health, production, urban growth, and territorial resilience.

Updated on June 14, 2026

Potable water and distribution networks

Potable water networks require routing, diameters, pressures, sectoring, and suitable materials to guarantee service, maintenance, and future growth.

Sewage, collectors, and sanitation

Sanitation combines sewer networks, main collectors, pumping stations, and treatment plants. Its design has a direct impact on environmental and urban quality.

Canals, cisterns, and storage

In San Juan, hydraulic solutions also include waterproofed canals, cisterns, and conveyance or storage systems for urban, industrial, and productive uses.

Works built to last decades

Water infrastructure must be designed with service life, maintenance, population growth, productive demand, and environmental adaptation in mind.

Frequently asked questions

What does a hydraulic project include?

It can include water networks, sewage, canals, cisterns, pumping stations, collectors, treatment plants, and sanitation works.

Why is it important to plan for future capacity?

Because water and sanitation networks support urban or productive growth for decades. Designing only for current demand can create bottlenecks.

Does CONEQ build water infrastructure in San Juan?

Yes. CONEQ has experience with potable water networks, sanitation, waterproofed canals, cisterns, and pumping stations.