I'm looking for a little advice regarding damp issues along a party wall in a 1910s terrace.
There was minor discolouration along the top of the skirting when I moved in 2 years ago. This has gotten progressively worse since, to the point where the wallpaper was beginning to crumble. I've had a damp survey carried out and that confirmed that the problem does appear to be ground water rising up.
The surveyor recommended that I either have a dpc barrier installed by removing a few bricks at a time, or have a chemical injection course
Since the survey I've hacked off the plaster along the affected wall and you can see there's a fair bit of brick spawling now. I've also been running a dehumidifier next to it for a little over 3 weeks continuously and keeping an eye on moisture levels. They shoot up immediately after any rainfall, causing excessive humidity and condensation throughout the entire house. Mold control is a neverending struggle.
I'm having issues progressing further as I'm struggling to identify whether there is in fact a damp course in the wall itself. I can see what looks like a plastic membrane running underneath the concrete floor that laps up to the edge of the wall and then down, but I'm not sure if if actually goes into the wall further down or just loops back on itself. Its only visible in a few places, most of it is completely hidden under a layer of concrete that goes to the brickwork.
Further to this, that wall is single brick in places (chimney breast and alcoves on the other side, converted to a student HMO shortly after I bought this one - yay for fire doors in edwardian terraces :-\ ) so would I be right in assuming that the damage would also be extensive on the other side? They filled the alcoves in when they converted, potentially covering the proble, so I don't think a surveyoyr will be able to spot anything without poking holes in things.
If I've missed any details that might be relevant, please let me know and I'll try to update as soon as I can.
Many thanks