I'm really worried about this and need some feedback and advice.
I have a very old stone house that is at risk of (brief) flooding and suffered badly from damp when I moved in. Water also came up through the floor when the water table was very high. My former partner said the walls needed to breathe and dug out the concrete that abutted the walls to put in a french drain, and also put a drain under the house that takes water out to the trench. This seemed to work and solved a lot of the damp.
Now he is gone and I got a builder to finish various work, including the drain. He dug out a lot more concrete and I thought 'looks good'. Then he said he wanted to line the sides with concrete. This seemed half-way sensible as the sides could be unstable etc, and the mortar in the wall was getting worn away at the bottom. He used a lot of shuttering and this took longer than I thought, and then when the shuttering came off and I had a look I saw he had lined the WHOLE trench with concrete, sloping down to where I wanted to put a pump (no natural drainage slope away from the house for when there is a LOT of water, or the river floods). I should explain the trench fills the space behind a retaining wall, which keeps the worst of the flood away from the house, and I needed this finished so I could put the new front steps in.
Now I'm getting really worried. He was talking about making the concrete on the house wall even higher 'in case it floods higher'. We spent ages smashing through it! I feel like such a fool for not being more on the case while this was happening. I DID try to explain several times about the french drain and the concrete was a last-minute addition - I was actually just expecting a thin layer over the bottom of the wall that could be painted with bitumen.
What do I do now? Get him to take it out? He won't be happy. What could his reasoning be? Am I being silly? I feel like maybe leaving it for a few years and seeing if it really does cause damp in the house again, but changing it later will mean re-doing the whole front, steps and all.