Hello, All
I have a wonderful old 1917 arts-n-crafts style home in Montana
I'm beginning to see crumbly spots in the concrete basement walls. Each of these is associated with a place where the soil on the outside was damp/moist in the past. The crumbling areas are all associated w/ a good bit of dampness in the concrete. They range in size from 3 - 12 in. in diameter, to 1/2 to 3 in. deep. Total of probably 5 of them.
I've gotten all of the problems fixed on the outside, so that the soil should be drying out over the next summer or so. But now, I need to start planning to repair these crumbling spots on the inside.
The crumbling spots are all open to the basement air - I've pulled out as much of the moist crumbling concrete as I thought prudent. There won't be anyone living in the house over the winter, so there won't be any other moisture generated in the basement. The furnace is on (house thermostats set at 50.) I hope that the spots will dry significantly over the winter.
Does anyone have any experience repairing these kinds of problems? Any suggestions or comments would be appreciated. Any ideas of the best materials?
Thanks in advance for any advice !
PlumBob
I have a wonderful old 1917 arts-n-crafts style home in Montana
I'm beginning to see crumbly spots in the concrete basement walls. Each of these is associated with a place where the soil on the outside was damp/moist in the past. The crumbling areas are all associated w/ a good bit of dampness in the concrete. They range in size from 3 - 12 in. in diameter, to 1/2 to 3 in. deep. Total of probably 5 of them.
I've gotten all of the problems fixed on the outside, so that the soil should be drying out over the next summer or so. But now, I need to start planning to repair these crumbling spots on the inside.
The crumbling spots are all open to the basement air - I've pulled out as much of the moist crumbling concrete as I thought prudent. There won't be anyone living in the house over the winter, so there won't be any other moisture generated in the basement. The furnace is on (house thermostats set at 50.) I hope that the spots will dry significantly over the winter.
Does anyone have any experience repairing these kinds of problems? Any suggestions or comments would be appreciated. Any ideas of the best materials?
Thanks in advance for any advice !
PlumBob
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