Business plumbing takes care of the plumbing demands of companies like office spaces, retail environments, restaurants, and even multi-story buildings. It usually encompasses the installation, upkeep, and service of water supply and waste removal systems in these public or business domains. These systems, however, handle a whole lot more use than what you'd find in the average home and thus need to be built up to code and run under certain specified requirements.Industrial plumbing serves manufacturing facilities, factories, and other industrial operations. It focuses on more intricate systems that frequently involve big machinery, specialized equipment, and no small amount of plumbing really. These setups require heavy-duty solutions to handle large-scale operations, big pushes of pressure, and the dainty amounts of water and chemicals that need to be used to make the magic happen. The systems often involved elaborate waste removal setups that transport the "used" fluids (believe me when I say, those setups need some used fluid to work right—in the operational sense).In Denver, the plumbing systems serving residential and industrial facilities both deal with the problems associated with the city's high altitude and its climate. However, the technical approach to plumbing in industrial applications is generally more complex than that taken in residential construction. That is because the kinds of facilities served by industrial plumbing call for more sophisticated and varied forms of both liquid and gas supply and sewer service.