Hey guys. I have an older house, one that has an old cast iron vent stack.. I am remodelling my kitchen, and the vent comes up directly into the middle of my kitchen. They boxed it in originally, but I want to open the wall up, so to do that, I need to relocate my vent stack. I have attached some pictures on the issue, and hope that I can find a resolution.
So.. the solution is this: It's currently 4" cast iron all the way up to the roof.. what I want to do is remove the cast iron and replace it with 3" pvc, so it will fit into my wall cavity. As you can see in one of the pictures, somebody already forked into the cast iron 'T' with PVC for the new drain system in the bathroom above.
Above this room is the bathroom, in which the wall behind the toilet was built out to conceal the pipe. I had to do some drain work to the toilet, so that wall and pipe is already accessible, and it continues up into my attic, where it attaches to the stack on the roof, so I can access all of the cast iron to pull it out.
My question is, how can I relocate the pipe back into the wall. If you can make out the picture pretty good, there's about 5" between the back of the opposite wall and the start of the cast iron pipe. When they ran it, they didn't go through the top and bottom of the studs in the wall, they laid the pipe by cutting a hole in the floor in front of the stud (Essentially the wall would be behind the pipe).
I was considering breaking the cast iron off from the basement all the way up, and replacing it all with 3" pvc, but I am stuck trying to figure out how to move the pipe back some more. I am wondering if they make low clearance elbows, or some sort of adapter that I can attach that will divert the pipe back 5" without having to bring the enclosed wall out some more.
What do you guys suggest I do?
The catch is.. the pipe can't simple be moved back up in the attic, because the upstairs walls were framed around the pipe correctly, and if I move the pipe in the bathroom back I will have to cut into the back side of my closet wall, so the shifting of the pipe is going to have to be done on the kitchen level. (The ceiling is currently 10 feet high, but I am putting in an 8' drop ceiling so there is ~ 2 feet of clearance to work with, plus the room between the floor joists.
The below pictures were taken from the kitchen, looking up at the floor of the bathroom above. This is where all the pipe work needs to be done at.
So.. the solution is this: It's currently 4" cast iron all the way up to the roof.. what I want to do is remove the cast iron and replace it with 3" pvc, so it will fit into my wall cavity. As you can see in one of the pictures, somebody already forked into the cast iron 'T' with PVC for the new drain system in the bathroom above.
Above this room is the bathroom, in which the wall behind the toilet was built out to conceal the pipe. I had to do some drain work to the toilet, so that wall and pipe is already accessible, and it continues up into my attic, where it attaches to the stack on the roof, so I can access all of the cast iron to pull it out.
My question is, how can I relocate the pipe back into the wall. If you can make out the picture pretty good, there's about 5" between the back of the opposite wall and the start of the cast iron pipe. When they ran it, they didn't go through the top and bottom of the studs in the wall, they laid the pipe by cutting a hole in the floor in front of the stud (Essentially the wall would be behind the pipe).
I was considering breaking the cast iron off from the basement all the way up, and replacing it all with 3" pvc, but I am stuck trying to figure out how to move the pipe back some more. I am wondering if they make low clearance elbows, or some sort of adapter that I can attach that will divert the pipe back 5" without having to bring the enclosed wall out some more.
What do you guys suggest I do?
The catch is.. the pipe can't simple be moved back up in the attic, because the upstairs walls were framed around the pipe correctly, and if I move the pipe in the bathroom back I will have to cut into the back side of my closet wall, so the shifting of the pipe is going to have to be done on the kitchen level. (The ceiling is currently 10 feet high, but I am putting in an 8' drop ceiling so there is ~ 2 feet of clearance to work with, plus the room between the floor joists.
The below pictures were taken from the kitchen, looking up at the floor of the bathroom above. This is where all the pipe work needs to be done at.