Hi
My rising damp problem seems to be getting worse. In the words of my surveyor when I bought the house 2 years ago:
"Ground levels around the base of the walls need to be cut back and reduced so that there is a separation gap of not less than 150mm between the damp proof course and ground level. On the front elevation and around the bays the render continues to ground level. This will bridge any damp proof course within the wall structures and will allow moisture to be drawn up over the damp proof course".
At the time, I got a quote for a local firm to remediate the problem. They suggested essentially:
- Cut back render to expose ground level.
- Remove soil etc to correct depth below DPC.
- Paint liquid DPC to wall below render."
The problem was they wanted to charge 3k for the privalege - something I couldn't afford.
My question is, bar the hard slog, is there any real skill to this, or is it simply getting my angle grinder out, cutting along a line above the current slate DPC, and then slapping on some liquid DPC? I've done far more complicated stuff round the house since..
I need to render the entire external house (17k according to same contractor), so the damp job does not need to be an uber supreme finish just yet
Thanks
My rising damp problem seems to be getting worse. In the words of my surveyor when I bought the house 2 years ago:
"Ground levels around the base of the walls need to be cut back and reduced so that there is a separation gap of not less than 150mm between the damp proof course and ground level. On the front elevation and around the bays the render continues to ground level. This will bridge any damp proof course within the wall structures and will allow moisture to be drawn up over the damp proof course".
At the time, I got a quote for a local firm to remediate the problem. They suggested essentially:
- Cut back render to expose ground level.
- Remove soil etc to correct depth below DPC.
- Paint liquid DPC to wall below render."
The problem was they wanted to charge 3k for the privalege - something I couldn't afford.
My question is, bar the hard slog, is there any real skill to this, or is it simply getting my angle grinder out, cutting along a line above the current slate DPC, and then slapping on some liquid DPC? I've done far more complicated stuff round the house since..
I need to render the entire external house (17k according to same contractor), so the damp job does not need to be an uber supreme finish just yet
Thanks