Karibu House of Maji

Water Treatment solutions for Homes, Businesses and institutions.

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How to make a water purifier for school step by step?

Stop Building Bottle Filters. Start Installing Real Systems.

I have seen it too many times.

A school spends a science lesson building a bottle filter with sand and charcoal. The children are excited. The muddy water comes out clearer. The teacher calls it a success.

But the next day, the students are still drinking from the same old tap. The same brownish water. The same metallic taste. The same stomach aches.

A classroom project is not a solution. It is a demonstration.

If you want clean water for your school every single day – not just for a lesson – you need a real water purification system. Installed. Maintained. Working 24/7.

This guide walks you through the step-by-step process of choosing, installing, and maintaining an actual water treatment system for a school.

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Step 1: Test Your Water – No Guessing Allowed

You cannot choose a system without knowing what is in your water.

What to test for:

ContaminantWhy it matters for schools
TDS (total dissolved solids)High TDS (>200 ppm) affects taste and indicates possible heavy metals
Bacteria (E. coli, coliform)Causes diarrhoea, school absences, outbreaks
Lead, arsenic, nitratesLong-term health risks, especially for children
Hardness (calcium, magnesium)Damages pipes, water heaters, and kitchen equipment
ChlorineBad taste reduces student water intake
pHVery low or high pH corrodes pipes

Where to test: Use a certified laboratory or a company like House of Maji that offers certified water analysis – scientific testing of physical, chemical, and microbiological properties.

Cost: Ksh 10,000 – 25,000 depending on the number of parameters.

Why this step matters: You would not take medicine without a diagnosis. Do not buy a water treatment system without a water test.

Step 2: Determine Your School’s Daily Water Demand

How many litres does your school need per day?

Calculate like this:

  • Drinking water: 1–2 litres per student per day
  • Cooking (if boarding school): 2–3 litres per student per day
  • Handwashing and hygiene: 1–2 litres per student per day
  • Staff and visitors: Add 20%

Example 1 – Day school with 400 students:
400 students × 2 litres (drinking + handwashing) = 800 litres per day minimum.

Example 2 – Boarding school with 500 students:
500 students × 5 litres (drinking + cooking + hygiene) = 2,500 litres per day minimum.

Pro tip: Size for peak demand (break time, lunch time), not daily average. Install a storage tank (500–2,000 litres) so the system can fill it overnight.

Step 3: Choose the Right Technology for Your School’s Water

Based on your water test results, here are the three most common water systems for Kenyan schools.

Option A: Reverse Osmosis (RO) Machine – Best for High TDS or Heavy Metals

What it removes: 99% of contaminants – lead, arsenic, nitrates, fluoride, microplastics, salt, high TDS, and most bacteria.

Best for: Schools with borehole water testing high for dissolved solids or heavy metals. Also for schools wanting bottled-water quality from every drinking tap.

What a school RO machine includes:

  • Commercial-grade membrane (not domestic)
  • Pre-filters (sediment + carbon) to protect the membrane
  • High-pressure pump
  • Storage tank (500–2,000 litres)
  • Remineralisation option (adds back healthy minerals for taste)

Daily output: 1,000 – 10,000 litres depending on size.

Estimated investment: Ksh 250,000 – 800,000 depending on capacity.

Annual maintenance: Ksh 30,000 – 80,000 (filter changes, membrane cleaning, servicing).

Water waste: 2–4 litres wasted per litre produced. Plan for proper brine disposal.

Option B: UV System + Filtration – Best for Bacteria Without High TDS

What it removes: Bacteria, viruses, parasites (UV). Sediment and chlorine taste (pre-filters).

Best for: Schools with borehole or rainwater testing positive for bacteria but low TDS and no heavy metals.

What a school UV system includes:

  • Sediment filter (removes dirt)
  • Carbon filter (removes taste and chlorine)
  • UV chamber (kills germs)
  • Storage tank

Daily output: Unlimited – flow rate dependent (e.g., 500–2,000 litres per hour).

Estimated investment: Ksh 100,000 – 300,000 depending on flow rate.

Annual maintenance: Ksh 20,000 – 50,000 (UV lamp replacement every 12 months, filter changes).

Advantage: No water waste, low operating cost, preserves healthy minerals.

Option C: Whole-School Carbon Filtration – Best for City Water Only

What it removes: Chlorine taste, sediment, rust, bad odours.

Does NOT remove: Bacteria, heavy metals, high TDS, hardness.

Best for: Schools on Nairobi Water or other municipal supplies that already test safe for bacteria and metals.

What a school carbon system includes:

  • Large carbon tank (commercial grade)
  • Backwash valve for automatic cleaning
  • Sediment pre-filter

Estimated investment: Ksh 80,000 – 200,000.

Annual maintenance: Ksh 10,000 – 30,000 (carbon replacement every 2–3 years, filter changes).

Option D: Combination System – Best for Schools with Multiple Problems

Many schools need more than one technology.

Examples:

  • Borehole water with bacteria AND high TDS → Sediment filter + UV + RO
  • Borehole water with bacteria AND hardness → Sediment filter + UV + softener
  • City water with high chlorine AND occasional bacteria → Carbon + UV

House of Maji designs custom water treatment systems specifically for your school’s water test results.

Step 4: Install the System – Professional Installation Only

reverse osmosis machine or UV system is not a DIY project.

Professional installation includes:

TaskWhy it matters
Proper pipe connectionsPrevents leaks and pressure drops
Electrical work (for pumps and UV)Safety and reliability
Storage tank integrationEnsures peak demand is met
Bypass valvesAllows maintenance without shutting off all water
Post-installation testingConfirms system is working correctly

Warning: A poorly installed system will fail quickly. Cheap installation is expensive in the long run.

Step 5: Set Up a Maintenance Schedule

A school water treatment system is not “set and forget.”

Maintenance taskFrequencyResponsible party
Check TDS levelsDailySchool staff
Inspect for leaks or unusual noisesWeeklySchool staff
Change pre-filters (sediment + carbon)Every 3–6 monthsHouse of Maji or trained staff
Clean RO membrane (if applicable)Every 6–12 monthsHouse of Maji
Replace UV lamp (if applicable)Every 12 monthsHouse of Maji
Professional system checkEvery 6 monthsHouse of Maji
Water quality retestingQuarterly or bi-annuallyHouse of Maji

Why House of Maji Is the Best Water Treatment Company for Schools, Institutions, and NGOs

1. They Start with Certified Water Analysis – The Right First Step

House of Maji begins every school project with certified water analysis – scientific testing of physical, chemical, and microbiological properties. They do not guess. They do not recommend a water treatment system until they know exactly what is in your water.

2. They Have Installed Systems in 15+ Kenyan Schools

Our website shows 15+ schools as a client category. That is real, local, verifiable experience. They understand school budgets, peak demand (break time!), and maintenance constraints.

3. They Serve the Full Range of Institutions

Beyond schools, House of Maji has installed water systems for 44+ refill businesses97+ homes12+ hotels, and hospitals. They know how to scale from a small daycare to a large boarding school to a regional NGO.

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