Note: This webinar is open to everyone, but only members will have access to the recording.
Dr.-Ing. Robert Stein
Stein & Partner GmBH, Germany
Engineering-Based Condition Assessment of Large-Diameter Sewers and Wastewater Structures for Structural Capacity Evaluation
21st May 2026, 14:00 GMT (16:00 CET, 10:00 US EST)

Overview
The condition assessment of large-diameter sewers and wastewater structures differs fundamentally from the inspection of non-man-entry pipelines. Unlike factory-produced pipes, these large conduits and structures are typically individually constructed civil engineering works, often built decades ago, with unknown or insufficiently documented structural layouts, materials, and boundary conditions.
As a result, standardized inspection and assessment approaches alone are generally insufficient to reliably evaluate their structural integrity. An engineering-based condition assessment, therefore, requires methodologies that go beyond conventional inspection standards and visual defect coding.
This presentation introduces a proven, practice-oriented assessment concept that integrates extended condition data with engineering analysis to reconstruct the existing structural systems of large sewers and wastewater structures. The approach enables:
- The systematic identification and classification of structurally relevant damage,
- The realistic representation of load-bearing mechanisms and boundary conditions, and
- The determination of the remaining structural capacity of the asset.
By combining inspection data, material assumptions, structural modelling, and damage interpretation, the methodology provides a sound engineering basis for evaluating residual load-bearing capacity. This, in turn, allows rehabilitation measures to be planned in a technically robust and cost-efficient manner, avoiding both unnecessary interventions and unacceptable structural risks.
The presentation demonstrates how extended condition assessment can be transformed into actionable engineering knowledge, supporting sustainable asset management and long-term rehabilitation strategies for large-scale wastewater infrastructure.



