I know everyone has their own tastes, but you have a quaint way of quoting, Leftie.
Leftie said:
Softus said:
Are they sandstone blocks? Are they rendered on the outside? What's the ground level relative to the DPC?
Sandstone blocks. I have just had one gable re-rendered but the rest are exposed and opinted coursed stone.
And the ground level?
Leftie said:
Softus said:
Behind? How does that work?
One wall is below ground by about 8 feet.
Does this mean that you have a cellar/basement?
Leftie said:
I have duig out the old dampp profing spec and I think they have simply boarded it out.
Does this mean that there was boarding on the outside, keeping the soil away from the wall? If not, then please could you explain a bit more?
Leftie said:
I had been afraid theat they had taked it and that the tanking had been breached by water from above and behind.
Ah OK - I get that part now. If the wall was tanked then I agree it wouldn't be good for water to get between the tanking and the wall.
Leftie said:
Softus said:
Personally I wouldn't bother. I'd get a qualified surveyor to inspect the property when it's dried out.
I think I wil get the original company out as most of it is under guarantee until 2032 and I/they will want to be assured that the insurance company don't do anything that infrineges the guarantee.
In that case I would just furnish the repairer with a copy of the guarantee, and ask them to accept liability for anything they do that acts to invalidate that guarantee.
Leftie said:
Softus said:
In that case someone was ripped off 20 years ago. A chemical DPC is about as effective as a chocolate condom.
The plans from 2002 suggest some walls had a injected DPC, as well as waterproof rendering up to 1 meter and some also had a grey slurry finish.
Sound like their surveyor will want to see this before some chap with a big hammer starts knocking render off.
Hm. I concur. Engage someone qualified to assess the problem and measure damp levels, then do the repairs then recommend, then measure again.