Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
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These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
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Posted By: gyrogearBut you would still have to tank the back of your wall, as nothing would force percolation water to head down to the drain, it would likely just take the easy route into the wall..
Posted By: gyrogearYes, but if the drain invert lies at minus three meters, then the wetness in that 3 meters of earth between the drain and the wall will still go for the wall !
Posted By: jemhaywardEvents, events...
Yesterday we cleared some clay off the floor and found what may be a drain. It had some water in it, and it didn't seem to be going anywhere, so a partially blocked drain.
I went down there this morning to see if the water level in the hold had changed, but the lights tripped the RCD.
The water level had changed, it's now about 25cm deep in water all over the cellar floor.
So, the job has now changed. We need to fix the drainage, and I think we're going to have to accept that water is going to get in, but hopefully it will flow out as fast as it's getting in, but that makes UFH a complete no-no, and so insulating the floor is probably a pointless waste of time and money as well.
Even dropping the floor may not be feasible now.." alt="
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Posted By: tonywet and damp substrata under buildings and the conclusion was that it made no difference unless there was a flowing aquifer and this was extremely unlikely in upper layersBut rise and fall of ground water level is entirely possible, maybe even 'likely' in the top 3m layer - and that's just as much of a no-no as horizontally running water flow - will efficiently carry away stored heat.
Posted By: fostertomWith rise and fall of water table, no amount or depth of french drain will help - the water table will just flood the trench, with nowhere for the drain to take it away to.
Posted By: Peter_in_HungaryFrench drains should have an out flow - otherwise you are constructing a moat.Which should be a bit lower than the bottom of the french drain. If groundwater rises temporarily above that level, it's got nowhere to go - unless by some miracle (downslope?) the ground water level dips
Posted By: fostertomIt depends what the outflow drains into, doesn't it? Normally it would be a watercourse, or as you say, an area downslope of the French drain. A French drain is basically just a land drain around the house.Posted By: Peter_in_HungaryFrench drains should have an out flow - otherwise you are constructing a moat.Which should be a bit lower than the bottom of the french drain. If groundwater rises temporarily above that level, it's got nowhere to go - unless by some miracle (downslope?) the ground water level dips
Posted By: fostertomthe drain's outflow should still find air voids in the ground to discharge into
Posted By: Peter_in_HungaryPosted By: fostertomWith rise and fall of water table, no amount or depth of french drain will help - the water table will just flood the trench, with nowhere for the drain to take it away to.
French drains should have an out flow - otherwise you are constructing a moat.
Posted By: jemhaywardAt the back, a french drain with some form of impermeable membrane against the rear wall and under the gravel, to form a drain, run that drain onto our land, and create another sump, with another pump, and pump the water into a drain that exists in the rear courtyard taking rainwater away. When we re-instate the stone flags above the french drain, put a membrane under them, and point them in so rainwater from our thatch at least doesn't get into the french drain in the first place.
Posted By: jemhaywardWe probably have no choice on that one, as it isn't our garden, so we'd have to put it back as it was, but the garden does slope towards our house so I suspect the main issue is't water from our roof, but water from their garden.