The Honest Truth About Briargate Water
We'll say something most water treatment companies won't: if you're in Briargate on CSU municipal water, you probably don't need a water softener. Colorado Springs Utilities sources from Homestake Reservoir, Ruedi Reservoir, and Fryingpan-Arkansas Project water — high-altitude snowmelt that produces naturally soft water averaging around 1.8 GPG. That's soft by any standard.
CSU is so aware of predatory water treatment sales in their service area that they explicitly warn customers on their website about companies that falsely claim city water is hard to sell unnecessary equipment. We respect that transparency — and we operate the same way. If you don't need it, we'll tell you.
What Briargate Residents Should Actually Consider
The real water quality concerns for CSU customers aren't about hardness — they're about what's in the water beyond calcium and magnesium:
- Chlorine and chloramines: Used for disinfection, affects taste and shower experience. A whole-house carbon filter removes these.
- TTHMs (trihalomethanes): Disinfection byproducts that form when chlorine reacts with organic matter. CSU has recorded levels near the 80 ppb federal limit. Carbon filtration and RO both reduce TTHMs.
- Chromium-6: Detected in CSU water above California's health guideline (though below the federal MCL). An RO system effectively removes chromium-6.
- Lead from interior plumbing: CSU's distribution system tests clean, but older homes may have lead solder or brass fixtures that leach small amounts. An RO system at the point of use eliminates this concern for drinking water.
The Smart Upgrade for Briargate: RO + Carbon
The combination that makes the most sense for most Briargate homes is a whole-house carbon filter (addresses chlorine taste, shower experience, and some TTHMs) plus an under-sink reverse osmosis system (addresses drinking water quality comprehensively — TTHMs, chromium-6, lead, and any other dissolved contaminants). This approach replaces the need for bottled water while meaningfully improving your water's taste and safety profile.
The cost is reasonable: a quality whole-house carbon filter runs $800-1,500 installed; an under-sink RO is $400-800. Both are far less than ongoing bottled water costs over a few years.