Nova Series Debuts as Other Water Expands Solutions for London Flat Residents

LONDON, UK, June 19, 2026 – Water technology company Other Water has introduced the Nova Series, a new filtration system intended to make everyday drinking water more enjoyable and accessible for people living in London’s apartments and flats.

The company was established to address concerns frequently raised by residents who want greater reassurance about the water coming from their kitchen tap. Hard water, older plumbing networks, storage tanks, and limited installation options are among the issues commonly encountered in apartment buildings.

London’s mains water is treated and regulated, but household experiences often differ depending on the building. Water can travel through shared infrastructure before reaching individual homes, potentially affecting taste, odour, and perceptions of quality.

In many apartment buildings, drinking water may pass through a shared cold water storage tank before it reaches an individual kitchen tap. Those tanks are normally out of sight for residents, managed by the building rather than the household, and inspected on maintenance cycles that can feel distant from the daily reality of making a cup of tea, filling a child’s bottle, or pouring a glass of water before bed. Health and Safety Executive guidance for hot and cold water systems recommends annual inspection of cold water storage tanks, including the condition of the tank and the water within it.

Other Water was established to address this gap between regulated supply and real-life residential experience. Its goal is to give London flat residents a practical way to improve the water they drink at home without relying on bottled water deliveries, bulky under-sink installations, or building-wide plumbing changes that are difficult for renters, leaseholders, and property managers to approve.

“Other Water was built from a problem we kept seeing in London homes: people do not necessarily want another lifestyle gadget; they want to feel confident filling a glass from their own kitchen,” said Daniel Pan, director of Other Water and founder of Other Foods, a UK healthy snack company.

“Nobody should have to stand in their own flat wondering what happened to the water between the mains supply and their glass. Londoners living in apartments often have less control over pipework, storage, and installation options than people in houses. We created Other Water to make cleaner drinking water feel simple, accessible, and built for the way city homes actually work.”

The company’s first solution, the Nova Series, is designed for compact urban kitchens and apartment living. It uses reverse osmosis membrane technology and aims to improve the everyday drinking-water experience by focusing on taste, convenience, ease of use, reduced dependence on single-use bottled water, and long-term peace of mind through a lifetime warranty. The system is designed for residents who want an at-home drinking-water solution that addresses everyday taste and hardness concerns as well as questions about substances such as microplastics and PFAS. To support its technology and filtration claims, Other Water has published its evidence and standards information, including details of its filtration approach, on its website.

Other Water’s approach is centred on three priorities: making better water easier to live with, reducing the need for bottled water at home, and designing products that suit rental flats, new-build apartments, older conversions, and shared residential buildings. The company believes that clean drinking water should not depend on whether a resident owns their home, can alter plumbing, or has space for a large system.

“The long-term vision is bigger than one product,” added Daniel. “Other Water exists to help solve the clean drinking-water problem for London apartments at the household level, then at the building level. The ambition is to work with residents, landlords, developers, and property managers so that better drinking water becomes a normal part of city living, not a premium workaround.”

The launch comes at a time when UK consumers are paying closer attention to water quality, infrastructure resilience, plastic waste, PFAS, microplastics, and household health. Other Water sees London as the right place to begin because of the city’s density, large apartment population, hard-water conditions, and mix of new and ageing residential buildings.

Other Water is now preparing the Nova Series for public launch and customer interest registration, and is inviting London residents, landlords, interior designers, and property managers to register interest at www.otherwater.co.uk.

spot_imgspot_img

Latest

Raising the roof at 20 Stories!

Cheshire-based family business, InstaShade, a specialist in high-end outdoor...

Experts call for greater variety on BBQ menus as consumer tastes evolve

LONDON, UK, June 18, 2026 – Retailers and hospitality...
spot_imgspot_img

Newsletter

Don't miss

James Wilson Gutter Cleaning and Repairs Highlights Importance of Summer Gutter Maintenance

As homeowners across the area turn their attention to...

Local CCTV Installation Company Reports Growing Demand for Home Security Systems

Local security specialist Titus Alarm and CCTV has reported...

The best Father’s Day gifts for every kind of dad

Father’s Day (June 21) is the perfect time to...

More News

Homeowners Turn to Professional Gutter Clearing as Preventative Maintenance Becomes Priority

Local Gutter Cleaner Repairer has increased its focus on professional gutter clearing services as more homeowners prioritise preventative maintenance to protect their properties from...

Sapyen and My Surrogacy Journey Unite to Strengthen Fertility and Surrogacy Pathways Nationwide

CALIFORNIA, US. June 4, 2026 – Sapyen and My Surrogacy Journey have entered into a long-term partnership designed to support intended parents with enhanced...

DIY Home Improvement on the Rise as Carpenter Shares Key Mistakes to Watch For

Darren Drumm, Founder of Drumm Carpentry, Kitchens & Wardrobes, says he has seen a significant rise in DIY interest, with more people taking on...