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Armchair
Joined: 14 Jan 2007 Posts: 205 Location: Winchester
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Gervase
Joined: 17 Nov 2004 Posts: 8655
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Posted: Fri Jan 19, 07 12:27 pm Post subject: |
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What sort of walls are you thinking about having damp-proofed?
It's actually very rare for an injected dmap proofing system either to be necessary or even to work without other, additional treatments.
In fact, most injected damp-proof treatments are a complete waste of time and money, I'm afraid, and the only thing that makes them appear to work (for a time) is the waterproof plaster and render that the practitioners also insist is used before they will issue a guarantee.
What is the nature of the damp problem in your property? Is it damp penetrating the walls from outside, coming up through the floor or condensing on the walls? What are the ground levels like on the outside walls and what sort of surfaces do you have outside?
The answers to those questions may well give you a cheaper and more effective solution than an injected DPC. If you have an older property which was not built with a DPC, the sort of treatment this firm suggests could well be the worst possible solution. In that sense, I fear for the cottage pictures at the bottom of the firm's page of case histories; their treatment was wholly inappropriate and would not have been approved by the local authority conservation officers.
If you do have a situation that does warrant an injected DPC, it will need to be in the form of a gravity injected silicone cream entering the mortar bed thoroughly between two brick courses just above ground level. If your house is built of stone, cob or anything other than brick, however, don't even think of an injected DPC!
But the chemicals used are not harmful, so in that sense they're 'green'. |
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Armchair
Joined: 14 Jan 2007 Posts: 205 Location: Winchester
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sean Downsizer Moderator
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 42219 Location: North Devon
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kevin.vinke
Joined: 19 Dec 2006 Posts: 1304 Location: Niedersachsen, Germany
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Gervase
Joined: 17 Nov 2004 Posts: 8655
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Armchair
Joined: 14 Jan 2007 Posts: 205 Location: Winchester
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Barnie
Joined: 26 Jan 2007 Posts: 40 Location: SW/Wales
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Gervase
Joined: 17 Nov 2004 Posts: 8655
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Posted: Fri Jan 26, 07 5:59 pm Post subject: |
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Buildng Regs are guidelines only, and most more enlightened building inspectors will negotiate towards a solution, though it does sound as if Barnie's BCO was particularly mutton-headed.
Thankfully most these days realise that chemical DPCs in stone are pointless - on their own they have no effect on damp. However, they will often insist that the walls are tanked instead to counter dampness.
On a stone or other solid-walled property without an existing DPC the best way to counter damp is to remove the cause as far as is possible (by attending to ground levels, guttering and drainage) and to use breathable plasters, pointing and renders. There are sometimes cases where more is required - such as using an impermeable solution like Vandex or Newton 500 as a technnique of last resort when faced with penetrating damp and no prospect of altering the outside soil levels.
Your average damp-proofing contractor, however, will simply stick his probes in the walls, inject the required number of litres of silicone and then replaster with a waterproof plaster. It's what they all do. And it works for a decade or so, but in time the waterproof plaster cracks or the underlying stonework spalls and the damp comes back through. Meanwhile, any timber in the wall - joist ends or lintels - will have started to rot thanks to being saturate. The long-term result is often a bigger bill for more drastic structural work and lasting damage to the fabric of the building.
That's why English Heritage and SPAB advise home-owners to think very carrefully before they do it. |
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Barnie
Joined: 26 Jan 2007 Posts: 40 Location: SW/Wales
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Posted: Fri Jan 26, 07 6:58 pm Post subject: |
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Gervase wrote: |
Buildng Regs are guidelines only, and most more enlightened building inspectors will negotiate towards a solution, though it does sound as if Barnie's BCO was particularly mutton-headed. |
Our building inspector was fantastic, he became my most valued ally during the project, but at the end of the day no 10 year damp proof guarantee and the building couldn't be passed.
My project was a stone barn which never incorperated any form of damp course, built into the side of a hill (field barn), after removing 2,000 tons of shale from the rear to uncover the rear walls I installed a land drain which obviously cured any water coming off the hillside, we came to many solutions along the way including upping the U value in other areas to avoid covering up our stone walls but the DPC had to be done, or rather I had to provide the relevant paperwork.
Barn restorations don't qualify for zero rated vat on materials, only a one off claim for vat at the end when building has been passed, as you can imagine that's quite a lump of money, not worth squabbling over DPC's when you need the vat money to add a conservatory |
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Barnie
Joined: 26 Jan 2007 Posts: 40 Location: SW/Wales
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Gervase
Joined: 17 Nov 2004 Posts: 8655
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Posted: Fri Jan 26, 07 10:12 pm Post subject: |
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Nice place!
I'd imagine that the removal of all that shale and the land drain is what did the trick - it's what I would have done in the circs. In fact it's what we did do on our own place, having arrived to find one wall buried five feet into the side of a slope. It's now as dry as a bone.
A shame the BCO dug his heels on on the DPC but, as you say, in the overall scheme of things, it probably wasn't a huge amount to agree to.
With a conversion from agricultural use you can get contractors to levy VAT at 5 per cent throughout the work, provided you get them to invoice as such, with the words "In accordance with VAT notice 719 & 708, section 18.1" I've not had any trouble with clients who do this (and it makes life easier for me, too, as I end up sending less off to HMRC each quarter, while still claiming back the full whack on tools and materials that I have bought to do the work).
Obviously that means that the cheque you get back on completion isn't as hefty as it would be with 17.5 per cent VAT, but it means you don't have to spend so much up front - and you don't get interest paid on your VAT reimbursement. |
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Barnie
Joined: 26 Jan 2007 Posts: 40 Location: SW/Wales
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Posted: Fri Jan 26, 07 11:01 pm Post subject: |
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Thanks for your compliment Gervase.
The shale was put to good use - we built our access road with it, so it solved 2 problems in one hit, I love it when things work out like that.
The whole VAT issue with us proved more difficult due to not being VAT registered and actualy doing all the work including all joinery between myself/wife and a young 16 year old as my labourer. We had various accounts with builders merchants, plant hire and often sourced materials from odd places. Didn't use any contractors, the project was our full time occupation for 3 years...
I've had a look at your restoration and know only too well what it takes to do things right, so hats off from me
Can't resist showing you a couple more pics, very proud of what we achieved, as if you hadn't already spotted that
The cut roof was my masterpiece, all tusk tennons with pegs, here it is constructed on the floor as a dry run before dismantling again for final instalation up above..
Here it is partially installed
The finished barn conversion
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Gervase
Joined: 17 Nov 2004 Posts: 8655
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Milo
Joined: 16 May 2005 Posts: 342 Location: Oop North-ish.
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