- Joined
- 4 Aug 2019
- Messages
- 5
- Reaction score
- 0
- Country
I live in a 1930’s detached house with a 2ft crawl space under timber joists, but the crawl space floor is mainly clay and is quite wet/damp. There are a couple of air bricks around the sides of the house, but I am going to install some more to increase air flow.
The previous owners have had a sump pump installed with drainage paths dug into the clay that drains into the rainwater system and works quite well, there’s some standing water where the ground/clay is uneven where people have knelt down etc. but it’s only a couple of cm.
When it rains, water is seeping in through the brick work at the wall/floor joints and then the pump drains it away.
My issue is the clay is always damp even after periods of dry weather and it can take a long time for any standing water to eventually soak/evaporate away. Is this a problem that could cause moisture to get onto the timbers?
At present none of the joists have any damp/rot issues and all look ok
I was thinking of adding a couple of inches of shingle/crushed rock on top of the clay then a damp proof membrane and then another inch of gravel to help the water soak away and hopefully stop any moisture spreading to the joists.
Or would this cause more problems?
The previous owners have had a sump pump installed with drainage paths dug into the clay that drains into the rainwater system and works quite well, there’s some standing water where the ground/clay is uneven where people have knelt down etc. but it’s only a couple of cm.
When it rains, water is seeping in through the brick work at the wall/floor joints and then the pump drains it away.
My issue is the clay is always damp even after periods of dry weather and it can take a long time for any standing water to eventually soak/evaporate away. Is this a problem that could cause moisture to get onto the timbers?
At present none of the joists have any damp/rot issues and all look ok
I was thinking of adding a couple of inches of shingle/crushed rock on top of the clay then a damp proof membrane and then another inch of gravel to help the water soak away and hopefully stop any moisture spreading to the joists.
Or would this cause more problems?