Quote:
Originally Posted by mizmia Just an FYI.
We had a similar problem with the basement. Our concern was not so much the water on the inside, but of the pressure of the water and soil pushing up against the basement walls.
The walls are weakend and the concrete is not up to code for earthquake. You may find continuing mold and leaching onto the concrete walls. Shows up as a fine white powder.
A sump pump will remove water but not the underlying reason you have water in the basement. We put french drains on the sides of our house draining into the sewer system. We also hooked all of the gutters to these drains so groundwater is minimized against the concrete. This eleminated the need for the sump pump and keeps the foundation sound.
Your water may be from a different source, but if it is coming out of the walls you may want to think about a secondary back up solution. |
Similar situation I'll agree..
On the other hand, mold isn't necessarily a problem being how mold does not like light, and with the setup lights in that room It's so damn bright I highly doubt mold would be a problem..Humidity is dropping by the day, currently down to 61% and constantly dropping.. I put a door up across the entrance to the cellar and grabbed 2 huge air conditioner blowers down there hooked up to duct work that is leading straight to ground level, causing it to suck air from inside the house (down the stairs) and blowing it outside, It's actually working out quite well..
Once it all drys up (which it is actually starting to relatively fast) I will be putting self leveling concrete on the floor.. The source of the leak is from the ground, there is a crack along the ground, it's trying to push the water through the crack and the concrete is trying to hold that pressure, once its sealed though it should be perfect
