A drain is called un tuyau in French. If that drain is the product designe to drain water away from your home's foundations, we would also use "un drain", masculine noun.
The purpose of a French drain is to move water away from your home, protecting it from water damage. You can learn more about french drains at the Wikipedia.
A rubble drain is also called a French drain, blind drain, rock drain, drain tile, perimeter drain, land drain or French ditch. They are constructed by digging a step-sided trench, filling the trench with loose stones, and covering the stones with earth.
probably in France
Shops which are mostly for home solutions can be an answer for your problem. In those shops you can find professional employees and ask them for the best quality French drain.
The reverse French drain is where the down spouts is solid for the first ten feet of the drain pipe. This is then converted to a PVC pipe that is perforated. This gets discharged to a connected continual trench that is back-filled with drain-rock. The trenches distributes the water into the ground.
Yard Crashers - 2008 Ultimate French Drain 2-13 was released on: USA: 2009
On average a French Drain costs about $115. eBay, Build, Luxury Home Outlet, Faucet Direct, Casa, and also Faucet's online websites all sell this type of drain.
The size of a french drain depends on how well you soil drains. The soil where I live is heavy orange-tan clay, and you cannot dig a big enough french drain to carry away even a small amount of water. A civil engineer should be of some help, although you will likely pay for her advice.
France
French drain is actually a ditch filled with gravel, rock that redirects surface and ground water away from an area. French drains are commonly used to prevent ground and surface water from penetrating or damaging building foundations. Installing a French drain is definitely something you can do yourself, but be prepared for a lot of hard work. There will be lots of digging involved and you may encounter hard soil, roots, rocks, etc...
There are many examples of French adverbs of manner just like in English. A few examples are "rapidement" meaning "rapidly," "absolument" meaning "absolutely," and "vraiment" meaning "truly."