Just remove the strap pointing in problem area. It may not be the cause but your need to investigate it, you could always temporary repoint to match prior to pointing correctly.
Regards the floor, even if it’s level it can cause issues especially if the outside is paved. Water can run off that surface towards the building. Ideally it should be lower. Installing a French drain/soak a way will help. If it is the same height.
Re the internals. I would add a stud wall with insulation and Vapor barrier before boarding. But that’s in addition to what you have. Old houses were just directly lime skimmed onto the wall.
What’s behind your plasterboard? If it’s doing it during the cold snap, when the external wall cools, and your heating goes on, windows shut, usual drying clothes inside etc, it could be that that water vapour is penetrating somewhere and condensing at the dew point on the cold external wall and collecting at the bottom.
If it’s dot dab plasterboard, it could be where there’s a few blobs of adhesive that’s bridging the wall and board and the water is collecting there.
Regards the floor, even if it’s level it can cause issues especially if the outside is paved. Water can run off that surface towards the building. Ideally it should be lower. Installing a French drain/soak a way will help. If it is the same height.
Re the internals. I would add a stud wall with insulation and Vapor barrier before boarding. But that’s in addition to what you have. Old houses were just directly lime skimmed onto the wall.
What’s behind your plasterboard? If it’s doing it during the cold snap, when the external wall cools, and your heating goes on, windows shut, usual drying clothes inside etc, it could be that that water vapour is penetrating somewhere and condensing at the dew point on the cold external wall and collecting at the bottom.
If it’s dot dab plasterboard, it could be where there’s a few blobs of adhesive that’s bridging the wall and board and the water is collecting there.
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