by Perry525 »
Tue Jun 02, 2009 7:17 pm
From the photos, it looks as if the house is in a hole and the ground is raised all round?
The space between the raised garden is covered in concrete?
How does the rain water get away?
The photos show that the dpc is well above the concrete surround? Is that correct?
Yet the front wall is damp = cavity wall?
Have you checked the fit of the plastic windows?
More often than not, plastic windows are fitted carelessly and in a hurry. The fitters take little time to fit them correctly and there is often space for the rain to enter.
Do check the fit by knocking off the internal plaster to see if you can see the outside world through the gaps round the windows. (You probably will)
While doing that you can check how the walls round the reveal were insulated and finished and look inside to see if there is any insulation and if there is, if it is wet.
Or the outside wall is wet from the rain running through the gaps.
Then you can use a low expansion foam to seal them properly.
If after that, all is well, so far, then.
If you feel the poor work on the electrics is the culprit then remove the mortar and test.
The air vent below the floor is there to allow a cross flow of air to help keep the joists dry. Are there matching vents in all outside walls? Are all the ground floors made of wood? You need vents on all sides for the passing wind to suck the air through.
The key thing here is, that ground floor joists and floor boards rely on the heat conducted and radiated from the rooms above to keep them at a higher temperature than their surroundings and thereby dry. If there is no heat then, the wood will reach the same low temperatures as the surroundings and you will have condensation on the timber leading to rot.
If I understand, you write that an air vent was added to the front room later?
I cannot imagine what that was for?
Block it up! There is no point in letting cold air into a room and allowing expensive warm air to escape.