Hi there, new to this forum and grateful in advance for any advice.
Have a property that used to be a pub, so has a large cellar/basement, and looking to make the space a bit more usable by tanking the walls and floor to create a space for storage that's a bit dryer.
The walls had a layer of what looked like cellar paint on (no mould and little condensation) on top of a render in places and straight onto brickwork in others. I've taken this off to get back to the brickwork to reveal some reasonably damp mortar that needs some repointing.
My plan as a next step is to repoint the brickwork prior to tanking, and then do two layers of tanking, horizontal and vertical using something like KA tanking slurry, and am assuming that the mortar in its current condition won't be able to support the tanking.
But I'm wondering a few other things about the process.
1. Is there a massive benefit to rendering the walls first? Some tanking slurry suppliers suggest you can go straight onto brickwork if it isn't loose?
2. Is there a benefit in using a chemical DPC to protect the joists (above the fireboard in the pictures), or to reduce the water building up in the walls from the ground for the internal walls (half of the walls are internal, the others are external and have more salts on them), or is this irrelevant?
3. Should the walls be tanked their full height, or should I leave a course or two of bricks untanked at the top?
The wall construction seems to be 1880s, London stock brick and lime mortar. Walls aren't massively damp and there is no water under pressure, pooling water etc, but not suitable for keeping things dry from a storage point of view as it is. Have got some pictures of the walls as they currently look (after I've removed most of the paint on a couple of them and the old rendering):
https://ibb.co/Fzrtb91
https://ibb.co/mJP0Yhd
https://ibb.co/QXvXVbb
Cheers in advance for any thoughts.
Have a property that used to be a pub, so has a large cellar/basement, and looking to make the space a bit more usable by tanking the walls and floor to create a space for storage that's a bit dryer.
The walls had a layer of what looked like cellar paint on (no mould and little condensation) on top of a render in places and straight onto brickwork in others. I've taken this off to get back to the brickwork to reveal some reasonably damp mortar that needs some repointing.
My plan as a next step is to repoint the brickwork prior to tanking, and then do two layers of tanking, horizontal and vertical using something like KA tanking slurry, and am assuming that the mortar in its current condition won't be able to support the tanking.
But I'm wondering a few other things about the process.
1. Is there a massive benefit to rendering the walls first? Some tanking slurry suppliers suggest you can go straight onto brickwork if it isn't loose?
2. Is there a benefit in using a chemical DPC to protect the joists (above the fireboard in the pictures), or to reduce the water building up in the walls from the ground for the internal walls (half of the walls are internal, the others are external and have more salts on them), or is this irrelevant?
3. Should the walls be tanked their full height, or should I leave a course or two of bricks untanked at the top?
The wall construction seems to be 1880s, London stock brick and lime mortar. Walls aren't massively damp and there is no water under pressure, pooling water etc, but not suitable for keeping things dry from a storage point of view as it is. Have got some pictures of the walls as they currently look (after I've removed most of the paint on a couple of them and the old rendering):
https://ibb.co/Fzrtb91
https://ibb.co/mJP0Yhd
https://ibb.co/QXvXVbb
Cheers in advance for any thoughts.