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On one side of the house we have a concrete path that has serious
water damage. I would like to remove the path, grade the soil, and
improve the grading.

I believe the concrete path is serving to trap some of the rain water,
because if I extend the roof leaders beyond the path (to about 6' away
from the foundation) I get more water in my basement. I get less water
when the leaders open directly onto the path, even though it is 2'
closer to the house.

I'm afraid if I simply remove the concrete path, more water will
actually make it to the house. I want to do whatever I can to improve
the grading of the soil and minimize the amount of water absorbed
close to the foundation.

I don't have much room for grading because there is only about 12" of
foundation exposed. What is the best way to ensure that rain/roof
water gets as far away from the house as possible? Can I install
gravel underneath the top soil? Can I plant shrubbery or other thirsty
vegetation? Should I leave the concrete path since it apparently slows
down the water entry?

Any advice would be appreciated."


Get a line level and figure out the grade and make sure it's sloping
away from the foundation by about 3/4 of an inch per foot. Shrubs
aren't going to help, as they can't dispense with the amount of water
from a good rain. Get out during a heavy rain and take a look at
what's going on, where the water is going, etc. Make sure the water
from the leaders goes as far away from the foundation as possible, that
6 ft run sounds good. If you get more water in the basement when the
leaders are discharging 6 ft, than at 2ft, something isn't graded
right.