Plumbing drain and vent question

draindrain-waste-ventplumbingvent

I am in the middle of a bathroom remodel and discovered an assortment of drain and vent pipes behind the old shower. As I get ready to reframe the wall and make the plumbing ready for a tub, I find myself wondering if I should replace / optimize this mess of plumbing.

It may even be possible to reclaim a good bit of this wall space which would allow me to install a longer tub (right now my plan is a 4 ft tub for kid baths).

I'm by no means an expert on plumbing so I'm wondering what the collective mind has to say.
drain/vent lower
drain/vent upper

Thoughts?

Best Answer

The larger pipe looks to be your main vent. The other smaller pipes connecting to it are vents serving other fixtures. Codes limit the location on where vents can be connected, typically 6" above the flood level rim of the highest fixture being served and a minimum of 42 above the floor. That is why they are connecting as shown in the photo. The plastic vent which would have been part of a renovation/modification after the other work was completed looks to be connected a bit too low.

Just because it may look odd or look inefficient does not mean that it was done incorrectly. With the exception of the plastic pipe, this looks to have been done to meet the code requirements.

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