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10 m Concrete Water Tower 5,000 L
AOFS Reference Implementation: 10 m Concrete Water Tower with 5,000 L nylon tank.
Designed for simple, off-the-shelf steel construction using locally available materials.
This blueprint is non-normative and intended as a practical, low-tech reference for smallholder farms, NGOs, or off-grid installations.
Functional Purpose
Store 5,000 L of water in a tank elevated ~10 m for gravity-fed irrigation
Provide a higher-head water source for farms requiring greater pressure
Integrate optionally with AOFS Field Controllers for water level monitoring
Structural Concept
10 m high simple reinforced concrete frame tower
Supports a standard 5,000 L nylon tank (locally available)
Open-top tank for inspection and filling
Integrated Ladder for maintenance
Tank is secured to the tower by being fully enclosed by a brick wall
Designed to be assembled with basic tools and local labor
Hydraulic Layout
Tank outlet feeds irrigation zones by gravity
Isolation valve allows manual control
Overflow routed safely to drainage or secondary container
Optional integration with a small pump for secondary irrigation zones
Safety Considerations
Ladder and hatch should be used carefully
Ladder should be protected from being accessed by children
Ensure the foundation is anchored down to the bedrock
Ensure good quality concrete and enough reinforcing steel of acceptable quality
Overflow and basic manual valve operation prevent flooding
Manual Operation Pathways
Controller Integration Points
Optional water level sensor for Field Controller logging
AOFS control can read tank level for irrigation scheduling
Controller can enforce a minimum water level to ensure the tank remains gravity-stable against wind forces
Manual bypass always available — irrigation continues even if electronics are offline
Versioning Note
This design is simple and locally adjustable, so traditional versioning does not really apply
Builders may adapt frame dimensions, tank placement, or assembly method according to available steel, tools, and skills
Basic stability and functional operation should be maintained