Plumbing is one of the most crucial first steps in building any new house. Long before walls go up or fixtures get installed, plumbers set up the “rough-in”—the network of drains, vents, and supply lines hidden beneath the foundation and behind walls. Get this stage right, and you’ll minimize headaches and cost overruns later. Get it wrong, and you could face floods, sewer gas leaks, or endless rework once the slab is already poured.

In this guide, we’ll walk through the main components of a typical residential rough-in, based on an in-field look at a new house build. From understanding the blueprints to running sewer lines and water supply, you’ll see how everything ties together before concrete is ever poured.

Why the Rough-In Matters

  1. Correct Placement of Fixtures: The rough-in ensures each drain line, vent pipe, and water supply align precisely with the bathrooms, kitchen, and laundry room you’ll see on the final blueprint.
  2. Preventing Future Leaks: During a rough-in, plumbers can double-check connections, test lines, and verify slope before the slab is poured—reducing the risk of hidden leaks later.
  3. Building Code Compliance: Municipal inspections often focus on the rough-in, because any corrections are much easier to make when the lines are exposed. Once concrete is down, moving a line by even an inch becomes a big deal.
  4. Smooth Finish: If the rough-in is accurate, subsequent trades—like framers, drywallers, and tile setters—won’t need to chisel around misplaced pipes or patch misaligned drains.

Reviewing the Blueprints

Before you ever break ground or start chiseling, you need the right set of plans. Often, you’ll see:

In the field example, the plumber has a “miniature set” that outlines each room’s measurements and fixture placements. They can see exactly where the toilets, lavatories (sinks), and tubs go, including centerline dimensions from the walls. This specificity helps avoid guesswork and ensures all stub-ups (vertical pipes) come out at the correct spots.

Checking for Second Stories

If the house is two stories, you’ll often see “3 ½-inch drops” indicated in the plans—these are spots where you have a main vent or drain stack going upward to catch the upstairs fixtures. The plumber plans for that vertical stack in the rough-in, ensuring enough slope and enough space so future walls don’t clash with the piping.

Laying Out the Sewer and Water Lines

City Tap and Main Sewer

Most houses tie into the city’s sanitary sewer at a tap near the street. In the example scenario, the tap is located roughly in front of the house’s midpoint, but the plumber chose to run the main drain line to the right side—possibly to avoid certain obstacles like driveways, large trees, or city sidewalks. A few key considerations:

Benchmarking Slope

Drain lines rely on gravity. According to most codes, you need at least a ¼-inch drop per foot for pipes 2-½ inches or smaller, and ⅛-inch drop per foot for 3-inch or larger. In some homes, plumbers add extra slope for better flow, but too much slope can cause water to outrun solids, leading to clogs. Watch for:

Water Supply Lines

In new construction, you might see:

Inside the House: Key Areas

Bathroom Groups

Plumbers typically group bathrooms to save material and labor. In the field example:

  1. Guest Bath at the Front: The house’s first bathroom near the entry includes a shower, a lavatory, and a 3-inch riser for upstairs fixtures.
  2. Kitchen/Dishwasher Area: Possibly an island loop vent system, meaning a 2-inch drain looping around for code-compliant venting.
  3. Master Suite in the Back: Features a big shower, roman tub, double lavatories, and a toilet. All these tie into a 3-inch (or sometimes 4-inch) main that’s carefully sloped.

Loop Vent for Kitchen Island

Island venting often involves a loop that goes below the slab, then back up and out through the roof. The plumber might set a 2-inch combination wye to roll up, creating the loop. Another 2-inch line might be a water feed or additional vent route. Understanding loop vents is crucial since an island sink can’t have a standard vertical vent in the middle of the kitchen floor.

Laundry and Powder Rooms

If the plan shows a powder room near the living area or a laundry near the garage, each gets its own drain branch—often 2-inch for laundry standpipes and 3- or 4-inch for any toilets. Each fixture must have proper venting. On a slab, that means you might see multiple short risers arranged to align with walls.

Top Tips for a Quality Rough-In

  1. Double-Check Measurements
    Don’t rely on memory for fixture centers. If the blueprint shows 12 inches from the finished wall to the toilet flange, verify the exact framing thickness and any wall coverings.
  2. Secure the Pipes
    Note how plumbers typically anchor PVC or cast iron with rebar or conduit. Prevent floating or shifting when concrete is poured by ensuring they’re well-staked.
  3. Test Before Pour
    Many codes require a hydrostatic or air test to confirm no leaks in the system. Far easier to fix a cracked fitting when everything is uncovered.
  4. Leave Room for Adjustment
    For tubs and showers, some plumbers place a box-out (sometimes a square of Styrofoam or a small wood form) around the drain area. That extra space allows for small alignment tweaks when setting the fixture trap.
  5. Communicate with Other Trades
    Talk with framers and HVAC installers so your vertical stacks aren’t in conflict with load-bearing beams, duct runs, or major electrical lines. Coordinating now avoids busting holes in your brand-new plumbing lines.

Planning the Next Steps

Once the rough-in passes inspection, the following usually happen:

Common Mistakes to Avoid

The Outcome of a Proper Rough-In

When the rough-in is done well:

Conclusion

Your house’s plumbing rough-in is the silent backbone of the entire build. By carefully reading blueprints, managing slope, sizing lines correctly, and coordinating with other trades, you create a system that not only meets code but also functions flawlessly for years. It’s not just about laying pipe; it’s about blending geometry, building science, and craftsmanship into a single, reliable network hidden beneath the slab.

If you’re fascinated by the behind-the-scenes of a new house’s plumbing infrastructure, stay tuned for the next phase—when we cover everything from the top-out to the final fixture installation. In the meantime, take a good look at your own rough-in (or watch your plumber’s process) with this checklist in mind. A job well done here means smooth sailing when you turn on the taps and flush the toilets for the first time.

 

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