A kitchen in a private home if only food that is.
Commercial kitchen hand sink requirements.
Most commercial kitchen design projects will require at minimum 4 types of sinks.
140 degrees f hot water is required due to dishwashers requiring 180 degrees f water for final rinse and a booster heater will be needed to raise the water temperature from 140 degrees f to 180 degrees f.
These sinks are typically direct drained.
Required for food prep the waste receptor illustrated here is a floor sink.
One mop sink for obvious reasons.
Sinks reserved for hand washing only must be provided in the bar area for employee use.
Hand soap and sanitary hand drying devices such as single service towels hot air dryers etc.
Some counties may require that hand washing sinks be constructed with non hand operated controls hand soap dispensers hot and cold water and single use towels.
Handwash sinks must be conveniently located and easily accessible for use by employees in all food preparation food dispensing processing warewashing and ice bagging areas and in or immediately next to toilet rooms.
May be either floor mounted as in the image above or similar in design to a utility room sink you might find in a residential building.
The number and placement of hand sinks becomes more important with more.
At least one triple compartment sink will be required.
It is the interpretation of the board that commercial kitchens are not considered public and therefore the outlet temperature for hand sink faucets in commercial kitchens are not required to have an outlet temperature of 110 degrees.
It may be tempting to get one that doesn t take up too much room but be wary.
Commercial kitchen design and construction requirements encompass everything from the handling preparation and storage of food to proper workplace temperatures and are regulated by a range of local state and federal agencies including osha and the fda among others.
This includes dough bowls rethermalizers racks and other typically long or deep items.
Plumbing code in commercial kitchens.
The next section of the code specifies that operators must also give staff a hygienic way to dry their hands whether that s paper towels or a hand dryer.
Standards that establish sanitation requirements shall be specified.
Section 6 301 11 4 states that there must be hand soap either liquid powder or bar available at every sink or set of sinks.
The board will allow a maximum temperature of 120 degrees fahrenheit.
The second pipe from another sink to the right is illustrating what the pipe would look like if it terminated in the waste receptor with an air gap.
Larger bar areas may require multiple hand washing sinks.