This case study walks through a real irrigation design for a typical rectangular front yard of 200 m² (20 m × 10 m). The property features a lawn, two flower beds, and one ornamental tree. Water source: municipal supply at 25 L/min and 3 bar (43.5 PSI). Below is a complete breakdown of design decisions, hydraulic calculations, and equipment specifications.

1. Site overview and initial data

Rectangular front yard: 20 m long by 10 m wide. Flat terrain, slope under 1%. Soil type: loam, recommended precipitation rate 12 mm/h. Site objects:

  • Lawn — main area (~160 m²), split by a walkway into left and right sections
  • 2 flower beds — along the fence, total area ~30 m²
  • 1 ornamental tree — canopy diameter 3 m, needs deep watering

The water tap is located on the left side of the house wall. Available pressure after the meter: 3 bar (43.5 PSI), maximum flow: 25 L/min.

2. Zone layout

Using the 75% rule, maximum flow per zone must not exceed 18.75 L/min. We divided the yard into 3 zones:

Zone 1 — Lawn (left section)

  • 6× Hunter MP1000 (90–210°), radius 2.5–4.5 m
  • Flow per nozzle: 1.7 L/min at 2.8 bar
  • Total zone flow: 6 × 1.7 = 10.2 L/min ✓ (under 18.75)
  • Precipitation rate: ~12 mm/h — matches loam absorption

Zone 2 — Lawn (right section)

  • 5× Hunter MP2000 (90–210°), radius 4.0–6.4 m
  • Flow per nozzle: 2.1 L/min at 2.8 bar
  • Total zone flow: 5 × 2.1 = 10.5 L/min
  • Precipitation rate: ~12 mm/h — matched with Zone 1 for uniformity

Zone 3 — Flower beds (drip irrigation)

  • 50 m drip line Netafim Techline, emitter spacing 30 cm, flow 2.3 L/h per emitter
  • Total zone flow: 50 m × 2.3 L/h ÷ 60 = 1.9 L/min
  • Ideal for flowers — water delivered directly to the root zone without wetting foliage

3. Pipe layout

Mainline from tap to valve box: 32 mm PE pipe (15 m). From valve box to heads: 25 mm PE pipe (35 m total across 3 zones). Trenching depth: 25–30 cm.

  • Mainline: 32 mm PE → 3× Hunter PGV-101 solenoid valves (1")
  • Zone 1: 25 mm PE, 12 m → 6 sprinklers
  • Zone 2: 25 mm PE, 14 m → 5 sprinklers
  • Zone 3: 25 mm PE, 9 m → drip line manifold

4. Hydraulic calculations

Pressure loss using Hazen-Williams formula (C=150 for PE):

  • Mainline 32 mm, 15 m, 10.5 L/min → loss 0.3 bar
  • Lateral 25 mm, 14 m, 10.5 L/min → loss 0.5 bar
  • Total friction loss: 0.8 bar
  • Residual pressure at nozzle: 3.0 − 0.8 = 2.2 bar — sufficient for MP Rotator (minimum 1.7 bar)

5. Bill of Materials (BOM)

ComponentModelQtyEst. price
MP Rotator nozzlesHunter MP10006€42
MP Rotator nozzlesHunter MP20005€40
Spray bodiesHunter PROS-0411€55
Solenoid valvesHunter PGV-101 (1")3€60
Drip lineNetafim Techline 2.3 L/h50 m€35
PE pipe 32 mmGeneric PE15 m€20
PE pipe 25 mmGeneric PE35 m€30
Backflow preventer1" backflow preventer1€25
ControllerHunter X-Core 4-zone1€55
Valve boxHunter VB-SPR1€15
Fittings (set)Generic — elbows, tees, couplings~20€25

Total estimated cost: €350–500 depending on supplier and region.

6. Results and verification

  • Coverage: 95% of lawn area — verified in SmartPluvia with coverage visualization
  • Pressure loss: 0.8 bar — within acceptable range (2.2 bar remaining)
  • Precipitation rate match: both lawn zones deliver 12 mm/h — uniform watering
  • Runtime: lawn 25 min/zone, flower beds 45 min → total cycle ~95 min

7. How to design this in SmartPluvia

  1. Plot boundary — press B, select "Rectangle" template 20×10 m
  2. Objects — add the tree and flower beds (press T)
  3. Sprinklers — press S, select MP1000 and MP2000 from the catalog
  4. Zones — press Z, create 3 zones, select "Drip" type for flower beds
  5. Pipes — press P, route mainline and laterals
  6. AI analysis — run coverage and hydraulic checks
  7. BOM — generate bill of materials
  8. PDF — export the project for the installation crew