DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Home Repair (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/)
-   -   dusty/dirty basement (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/103276-dusty-dirty-basement.html)

Ben Gold April 13th 05 02:52 PM

dusty/dirty basement
 
I have an old home in brooklyn (1896) with an unfinished basement with
rough concrete floors.

My plan is eventually to renovate the basement as living space * but
that's a future plan - not a NOW plan.

Right now, the basement is very dusty and dirty. I've read up a bit
about priming/sealing the concrete and possibly painting some of it to
keep the dust down, but I also think that the ceiling is part of the
problem.

Its a very old plaster (and lath?) ceiling with various pipes and such.

I really have two questions. One, is it worth knocking off all the
plaster, putting insulation in (because I'm there) and screwing up
drywall? I.E. putting in a new ceiling. If so, are there any resources
on ceilings that people like?

Second question is am I just going to end up having to re-do the ceiling
when I renovate, or if I do a decent job am I likely to be able to do
the walls and floor long after I've done the ceiling?

If it is not a good idea, is there any cheap easy way to "seal" the
ceiling so it's not dusty? It's old plaster with multiple repairs (old
and new) where pipes or electrical were run.

-Ben

Goedjn April 13th 05 04:54 PM



If it is not a good idea, is there any cheap easy way to "seal" the
ceiling so it's not dusty? It's old plaster with multiple repairs (old
and new) where pipes or electrical were run.


I seriously doubt that the old plaster on the ceiling is the source
of any significant amount of dust. If the basement is not currently
an occupied space, I'd just leave it as is, and take the ceiling
down and replace it as part of the renovations. What are the
walls?



Ben Gold April 13th 05 05:44 PM

Walls are brick/stone... definitely a big source of dust.

I guess I'm thinking that all the dust and old pipes and wires in/on the
ceiling are also a source of dust/dirt, so that if I clean up and treat
the walls I still might have dust - which would be disappointing.

Right now I just want the basement to be usable as a work space...
everything gets dusty down there so I only have boxes of things and
things covered in plastic. I'd like to be able to leave tools and such
down there without having them get dirty, and walk around without
getting dust everywhere.

Maybe you're right, just a real good cleaning and some sort of concrete
sealant... hold off on the ceiling until I'm ready to renovate.



I seriously doubt that the old plaster on the ceiling is the source
of any significant amount of dust. If the basement is not currently
an occupied space, I'd just leave it as is, and take the ceiling
down and replace it as part of the renovations. What are the
walls?


Tom Miller April 13th 05 10:25 PM

On Wed, 13 Apr 2005 12:44:31 -0400, Ben Gold
wrote:

| Walls are brick/stone... definitely a big source of dust.
|
| I guess I'm thinking that all the dust and old pipes and wires in/on the
| ceiling are also a source of dust/dirt, so that if I clean up and treat
| the walls I still might have dust - which would be disappointing.
|
| Right now I just want the basement to be usable as a work space...
| everything gets dusty down there so I only have boxes of things and
| things covered in plastic. I'd like to be able to leave tools and such
| down there without having them get dirty, and walk around without
| getting dust everywhere.
|
| Maybe you're right, just a real good cleaning and some sort of concrete
| sealant... hold off on the ceiling until I'm ready to renovate.
|
|
|
| I seriously doubt that the old plaster on the ceiling is the source
| of any significant amount of dust. If the basement is not currently
| an occupied space, I'd just leave it as is, and take the ceiling
| down and replace it as part of the renovations. What are the
| walls?


Before you go tearing down anything in the ceiling you might want to
make sure the heating pipes are not insulated with asbestos-based pipe
coverings. A place as old as yours is very likely to have them (my
1921 house does).

These things often deteriorate and flake off, especially at the
joints. You'd want to stabilize them first by painting them solidly
with exterior latex trim paint, or have them removed by an asbestos
abatement crew.

Ben Gold April 13th 05 10:31 PM

Thanks,

The asbestos has been removed already when we bought the place.



Before you go tearing down anything in the ceiling you might want to
make sure the heating pipes are not insulated with asbestos-based pipe
coverings. A place as old as yours is very likely to have them (my
1921 house does).

These things often deteriorate and flake off, especially at the
joints. You'd want to stabilize them first by painting them solidly
with exterior latex trim paint, or have them removed by an asbestos
abatement crew.


AutoTracer April 14th 05 12:22 AM

Still, be careful in case the dust contains remnants of the asbestos.

With all that dust, sounds like at least, you don't have moisture problems.

Sounds like a good cleaning followed by painting with a concrete sealer.
Much of the dust that troubles you now may be just recirculating around the
room. After vacuuming every surface, go through with a leaf blower to
dislodge any more dust and vacuum everything again.

A paint or epoxy concrete sealer will do better than a water sealer which
wont stop new dust from grinding off the surface of the cement. For the
ceiling, if it is not flaking off in big pieces, a good paint job should
prevent any plaster dust from forming. You can treat the walls the same as
the floor with a concrete sealer like seal lock or similar. You should seal
them anyway even if you plan to frame a wall in front.

If the concrete floor is uneven, rough, badly cracked or just unattractive,
you might be able to pour a thin coat of self leveling (concrete) mix over
the whole thing and make a new surface. Leveling now may save you a step
later if you decide to tile or put in just about any flooring surface. You
can prep the old floor with a wire brush and vacuum unless it has large oil
stains.





"Ben Gold" wrote in message
...
Thanks,

The asbestos has been removed already when we bought the place.



Before you go tearing down anything in the ceiling you might want to
make sure the heating pipes are not insulated with asbestos-based pipe
coverings. A place as old as yours is very likely to have them (my
1921 house does).

These things often deteriorate and flake off, especially at the
joints. You'd want to stabilize them first by painting them solidly
with exterior latex trim paint, or have them removed by an asbestos
abatement crew.




Ben Gold April 14th 05 04:29 AM

Thanks,

I find the whole concrete sealant thing confusing. Everything I read
says it should be breathable, but then all the promotional materials of
stuff I find on the web or in the store proudly state it's "moisture
blocking" abilities.

I want it to breathe, right? God forbid there is moisture, I don't
want it rotting away under or beside my building for years on end.

Same goes for painting masonry.

What's a good source on various brands, etc?

-Ben

Still, be careful in case the dust contains remnants of the asbestos.

With all that dust, sounds like at least, you don't have moisture problems.

Sounds like a good cleaning followed by painting with a concrete sealer.
Much of the dust that troubles you now may be just recirculating around the
room. After vacuuming every surface, go through with a leaf blower to
dislodge any more dust and vacuum everything again.

A paint or epoxy concrete sealer will do better than a water sealer which
wont stop new dust from grinding off the surface of the cement. For the
ceiling, if it is not flaking off in big pieces, a good paint job should
prevent any plaster dust from forming. You can treat the walls the same as
the floor with a concrete sealer like seal lock or similar. You should seal
them anyway even if you plan to frame a wall in front.

If the concrete floor is uneven, rough, badly cracked or just unattractive,
you might be able to pour a thin coat of self leveling (concrete) mix over
the whole thing and make a new surface. Leveling now may save you a step
later if you decide to tile or put in just about any flooring surface. You
can prep the old floor with a wire brush and vacuum unless it has large oil
stains.





"Ben Gold" wrote in message
...
Thanks,

The asbestos has been removed already when we bought the place.



Before you go tearing down anything in the ceiling you might want to
make sure the heating pipes are not insulated with asbestos-based pipe
coverings. A place as old as yours is very likely to have them (my
1921 house does).

These things often deteriorate and flake off, especially at the
joints. You'd want to stabilize them first by painting them solidly
with exterior latex trim paint, or have them removed by an asbestos
abatement crew.


AutoTracer April 14th 05 09:33 PM

Sealant and breathable are not terms usually used together unless you are
takling about the fumes generated during application. Unless you are
wallpapering with gore-tex, blocking water and air usually happen together.
I would never use a breathable sealant (oxymoron)

Moisture alone will not rot stone or concrete. you need something organic
or for the water to be flowing. Sealing water into or behind a (masonry)
wall is what you are supposed to do.



"Ben Gold" wrote in message
...
Thanks,

I find the whole concrete sealant thing confusing. Everything I read
says it should be breathable, but then all the promotional materials of
stuff I find on the web or in the store proudly state it's "moisture
blocking" abilities.

I want it to breathe, right? God forbid there is moisture, I don't
want it rotting away under or beside my building for years on end.

Same goes for painting masonry.

What's a good source on various brands, etc?

-Ben

Still, be careful in case the dust contains remnants of the asbestos.

With all that dust, sounds like at least, you don't have moisture

problems.

Sounds like a good cleaning followed by painting with a concrete sealer.
Much of the dust that troubles you now may be just recirculating around

the
room. After vacuuming every surface, go through with a leaf blower to
dislodge any more dust and vacuum everything again.

A paint or epoxy concrete sealer will do better than a water sealer

which
wont stop new dust from grinding off the surface of the cement. For the
ceiling, if it is not flaking off in big pieces, a good paint job should
prevent any plaster dust from forming. You can treat the walls the same

as
the floor with a concrete sealer like seal lock or similar. You should

seal
them anyway even if you plan to frame a wall in front.

If the concrete floor is uneven, rough, badly cracked or just

unattractive,
you might be able to pour a thin coat of self leveling (concrete) mix

over
the whole thing and make a new surface. Leveling now may save you a

step
later if you decide to tile or put in just about any flooring surface.

You
can prep the old floor with a wire brush and vacuum unless it has large

oil
stains.





"Ben Gold" wrote in message
...
Thanks,

The asbestos has been removed already when we bought the place.



Before you go tearing down anything in the ceiling you might want to
make sure the heating pipes are not insulated with asbestos-based

pipe
coverings. A place as old as yours is very likely to have them (my
1921 house does).

These things often deteriorate and flake off, especially at the
joints. You'd want to stabilize them first by painting them solidly
with exterior latex trim paint, or have them removed by an asbestos
abatement crew.





All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:26 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter