Washington, D.C.'s water supply comes from the Potomac River through the Washington Aqueduct, which serves approximately 1.2 million residents across the District and portions of Virginia. The treatment process adds chloramine for disinfection, which reacts differently with plumbing materials than traditional chlorine. Buildings with copper piping installed before 2000 experience pinhole leaks as chloramine accelerates corrosion in specific water chemistry conditions. Apartment complexes near the confluence of Rock Creek and the Potomac face higher mineral content that clogs aerators and reduces fixture lifespan. Multi-family plumbing services must account for these localized water quality variations when specifying materials and maintenance intervals.
The District's Department of Energy and Environment enforces strict backflow prevention requirements for apartment buildings connected to public water supply. Properties with irrigation systems, fire suppression equipment, or commercial ground-floor tenants must install and annually test backflow assemblies. DC Water requires certified testers to submit results electronically, and failures trigger water service disconnection notices. Crestline Plumbing Washington DC holds the certifications necessary to test, repair, and certify backflow devices without subcontracting to third parties. Our familiarity with DC Water's online reporting portal ensures your compliance documentation gets submitted correctly the first time, preventing service interruptions and violation notices.