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According to lore, this was originally called Primary Sewage Treatment Dome.
They changed it, because they wanted it to sound a little more fun. Because in
reality, it’s not fun at all. It’s the grossest aspect of this planet, in my
humble opinion. Let’s start with the water. Every sufficiently completed dome
handles its own water treatment for the most part. Using state-of-the-art
plants, the sewage is collected, filtered, and recycled as needed. This clean
water is then pumped back into their own pipe network, and if there’s any
excess, it can be returned to the planet’s water table. There isn’t much of a
water table, but it does exist, and it’s growing every day. What’s left over
after all of the water has been reclaimed is called sludge, and while it’s
absolutely disgusting, it is absolutely not useless. There are all sorts of
goodies in your waste. It can be used for biogas, fertilizer, and even
feedstock for additive printers. That’s right, the device you’re using to read
this review may be made out of poop! It’s a...different circle of life.
Certain useful ingredients can also be extracted from the sludge, like
phosphorus, nitrogen, and cellulose. These chemicals are all processed here,
and redistributed as necessary. But first, it has to get here. As I said, each
individual dome reclaims its own recycled water, but since there’s only one
Grand Central Sewage, it all has to be pelletized, sealed up, and transported
somehow. Enter the vactrain network. That’s right, the same tubes you use to
travel from your residential dome to, say, Archidome, are also used to
transport waste. Don’t worry, though. They use entirely different trains, and
entirely different train stations. It’s probably right under your feet,
though. If you were to step through a maintenance door, and walk down the
steps, you could end up in a second station where waste is moved into the
tubes. Scrap is shipped from here as well. Every time you throw away some
packaging, or a part breaks off from some equipment, it goes to one of these
hidden stations too, so it can head off to a separate dome, colloquially known
as The Scrapyard. I reviewed that dome as well, because I actually like the
utility domes. I find the secret, underground means by which we live to be
more interesting than what we do on the surface. It’s not pretty, and it’s not
glamorous, but it is monumentally important. Yes, it might be a little weird
to know that the chair your sitting on could have been in someone’s body at
some point, but trust me, this is better. We used to just dump our waste in a
hole, and leave it there forever. Talk about disgusting.
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