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Heathcliff Bambino
 
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Default Advice needed on new basement - sump hole higher than rest of basement

Brad wrote in message news:MPG.19da17cfcb2cc13598b708@news...
In article ,
said...
A member of my family is having a new home built. The basement has been
poured (it has poured walls) and they are waiting for the walls to fully
"set." Well, yesterday it rained, and what we observed was that the entire
basement floor appeared to be covered with a significant amount of water (a
piece of electric wire laying on the floor was completely submerged),
EXCEPT for the corner where the sump hole is. I then recalled that the
side of the basement where the sump is was the part that the concrete
finisher did last (it is the side by the egress window) and therefore, if
there was a small bit of extra concrete, that was likely where it wound up.


From your description it sounds like the basement was open to the sky
when it rained, right? No house on top of it yet? In that case, not
to worry. The sump is not really there to drain the basement from the
inside. If correctly installed, the way it works is this: drainpipes
are installed circling the perimeter of the foundation on the outside,
and are connected to the sump pit. When it rains water seeps through
the ground, hits these drainpipes, goes to the sump to get pumped out.
In other words it intercepts the water before it gets to the
foundation itself. The ground next to and below the basement stays
dry. There may also be a floor drain in the basement (and/or in the
stairwell, if there is an outside entrance to the basement) that
drains to the sump. The only circumstance where the water would drain
from the basement floor directly into the sump pit would be if there
is a pipe leak, washing machine overflow or some such. Again a floor
drain usually handles that.