Spencer Shipman was really, really thirsty.

The master鈥檚 student was outside in the summer heat, filling 500-gallon tanks with potable reclaimed water at the Metropolitan Sewer District鈥檚 Floyds Fork Water Quality Treatment Center. The four tanks were heading to four Louisville craft breweries, where the water would be used in some new brews as part of a pilot project.

Shipman, 22, knew better than just about anyone that it was ready to drink. So on that hot July day, he took a couple of gulps.

鈥淎nd I鈥檓 still standing here,鈥 he laughed.

Shipman is one of 20 University of Louisville Speed School students who had a part in the water pilot project, which has been named Next Round Brewing (motto: “Good as New, Great for Brew”). He is using the project for his master鈥檚 thesis.

The system set up at MSD’s Floyds Fork Water Quality Treatment Center.

Next Round is a joint effort among UofL, MSD, Louisville Water Co., the breweries, the Kentucky-Tennessee Water Environment Association, the Kentucky-Tennessee section of American Water Works Association and Isopure Corp., the world鈥檚 leading manufacturer of FDA-registered equipment for dialysis water treatment, which built the purifier. The goal was to find a way to turn something no one would consider drinking into something everyone would want to drink.

Milad Ebrahimi, a Speed School doctoral graduate who works as an MSD regulatory compliance analyst, had the idea about a year ago. He proposed a capstone project for seniors in the chemical engineering department: What are the best ways to remove enough contaminants from treated wastewater to make it drinkable?聽

Five teams of four students each took on different challenges for the small-scale wastewater treatment system, including experimenting with chemicals and filters, adding copper ions and water softeners and zapping the water with UV light. Ebrahimi and his team took the best ideas from each student group and incorporated it into Next Round鈥檚 water purification system.听

鈥淭hey all did a great job,鈥 he said.

Ebrahimi with chemical engineering students at the J.B. Speed School of Engineering Design Showcase in April, where seniors presented capstone projects.

The team tested the water, tweaked the system, then tested it again, then tweaked it again. This happened over and over and over and over until, by July, lab tests showed the water met the standards for drinking water. It鈥檚 the first time this has been successfully done in Kentucky and Tennessee, Ebrahimi said.

鈥淭his process is not fast,鈥 Shipman said. 鈥淏ut quality and safety is not to be rushed.鈥

An informational video about Next Round emphasizes that the amount of water on Earth is finite, and parts of the world are already struggling with the demand for clean drinking water.听

鈥淚nspiring and promoting dialogue about diversifying our nation鈥檚 water portfolio is an important part of a national water strategy,鈥 Ebrahimi wrote in an article describing the project.听

The four breweries — Gordon Biersch, Holsopple Brewing, Akasha Brewing and Apocalypse Brew — will serve their beer Aug. 18 at Louisville鈥檚 Waterfront Park during the celebration of water event sponsored by the Water Professionals Conference.听

鈥淭he source isn鈥檛 really quite as important as what comes out,鈥 said Nick Landers of Gordon Biersch.听

Read about the breweries in this WFPL .听

Check out more about this project here: