Plumbing – Studs cut to fit the sewer pipe — is it ok

plumbingsewerstuds

I removed the drywall in a kitchen and found that studs are cut through to fit the sewer pipes. Is it OK to keep them as is or should I do something?

I am thinking about installing the stud shoes.

Here's the picture how it looks like.

Studs cut for sewer pipes

Upd.
The house was built in 1955. This is the exterior wall.

The plastic pipe extends to the right about 3 feet — this a sewer for the washing machine in the adjacent bathroom.

Added more photos.
Also, I have no idea why the washer pipe is bent forward, there was an offset added to the wall to fit it. Can I make it straight to fit behind the wall?

Thanks!

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The view from the restroom

Best Answer

You are right to be concerned, there's been a lot of support lost with such deep notches. The question is whether this is a load bearing wall or not. Given the fact that it's still standing I'm going to assume it's non load bearing. Building codes often state that notches can't be more than 40% of the width of a stud, which looks like it's been massively exceeded, it's more like 75% which isn't good. The studs are mostly doubled and tripled, but not all of them are.

Kitchen walls often bear a lot of weight in the form of shelves or cabinets, even if they aren't holding up the house itself, so it makes sense to strengthen these. I'd at least double all of the studs and add stud shoes. Keep in mind that may still not be up to code in your area.

This related answer has useful information on guidelines.