View Single Post
  #6   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
Red Red is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 383
Default Moisture-proofing crawlspaces

On Jan 8, 12:59*pm, David Nebenzahl wrote:
On 1/8/2009 10:10 AM Red spake thus:







On Jan 8, 1:53 am, David Nebenzahl wrote:


Anyone here with experience making a crawlspace moisture-resistant
(with plastic membranes or other means)?


Please read the question carefully before answering. Not looking
for speculation or even helpful links to things I can find myself
on the web. Looking for personal experience. (Funny anecdotes
accepted as well.)


Reason for the question is a client with a damp crawlspace, dirt
floor, and an overly-humid house. (Older house, vents installed,
but no circulator, dehumidifier, etc.)


I covered the ground with 10' wide strips of heavy plastic sheeting,
each side overlapped about 10" and taped with tape designed for
plastic sheeting. Around the perimeter, I staked it down 16d nails
run thru a plactic cap from roofing caps. I have found no signs of
moisture in my crawl space. However I did get a few holes in it where
mice got under it and chewed their way out. A few handfuls of Decon
thrown under there once a year stopped that problem.


Thanks. That's close to what I was thinking of doing.

Now for the next part: client would like to be able to walk on the dirt
(uses crawlspace, which is nearly basement height, to store stuff in).
How about throwing down a few sheets, say cheap OSB, over the plastic?
Would that be stupid and attract termites? The idea is to protect the
plastic membrane from being perforated.

--
* Washing one's hands of the conflict between the powerful and the
powerless means to side with the powerful, not to be neutral.

- Paulo Freire- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


With a "crawlspace" that tall, how do you know the moisture is coming
from the ground and not through the walls? (I'm assuming it's dug out
and not multi-feet above the surface). I would not use OSB because of
potential termite problems. I would either pour concrete or use PT
plywood.

Red