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- 22 Feb 2016
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In my 1880 Victorian End of Terrace, the relative humidity in my front living room is staying around 75%. Not good.
Part of the problem seems to be water ingress through the external flank wall (which used to be joining onto a house next door bombed in WW2). I'm hoping to cure that by having lead flashing installed on the roof instead of the cracked cement fillets, and probably removing all cement render and plaster from the wall, replacing with lime equivalents.
Today, I uncovered the old hearth area in front of the chimney breast, and found a bed of soggy clay soil. I'm hoping that it's only soggy from ingress rather than wicking up moisture from the ground.
What should I do? Should I did out the soil? Is there likely to be some sort of solid base to it or is it just a tunnel to the centre of the Earth?
Pics attached. Thanks.
Joe
Part of the problem seems to be water ingress through the external flank wall (which used to be joining onto a house next door bombed in WW2). I'm hoping to cure that by having lead flashing installed on the roof instead of the cracked cement fillets, and probably removing all cement render and plaster from the wall, replacing with lime equivalents.
Today, I uncovered the old hearth area in front of the chimney breast, and found a bed of soggy clay soil. I'm hoping that it's only soggy from ingress rather than wicking up moisture from the ground.
What should I do? Should I did out the soil? Is there likely to be some sort of solid base to it or is it just a tunnel to the centre of the Earth?
Pics attached. Thanks.
Joe