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Posted: Fri Oct 21, 2005 11:53 am
by Neilpet
I have recently had the drive of my house block paved. The first course of bricks above ground, which is the second course below the damp course, is damp. Now half of this course of bricks was below the ground level previously and this damp only extends to the line to where they were underground. By this area is a downpipe that goes directly into the ground. What worries me is could this downpipe be leaking underground and causing this damp or could this damp be because the bricks were previously underground? These aren't engineering bricks, which I would expect.
Posted: Sat Oct 22, 2005 3:53 pm
by Tony McC
Again, without seeing the site, it's almost impossible to comment, Even a photo would be a help.
Posted: Tue Oct 25, 2005 11:24 pm
by Mick Leek
Hi maybe i can answer that one.
I have recently dug footings for a new extension and the bricks are the same.
The cause for this is because you have what is called a cavity fill below ground to the patio or exposed level. This means that the cavity is filled with a weak mix of concrete and also will contain all the Snots (fallen motor) from the brick laying.
This fills the cavity creating no air space. The bricks become saturated throught to the inner wall.
The bricks should eventually dry out.
Nothing to worry about unless it is a leaking down pipe. But i would expect damp up to the DPC then because the ground would be saturated
Posted: Wed Oct 26, 2005 8:24 am
by Neilpet
Thanks for your replies. I would have thought or hoped that if the downpipe was leaking then there would be some movement or "drop" of the block paving. This hasn't happened. It seems odd that the damp is exactly in line with where the old ground level was, half way up a brick. I hope it does dry out eventually as it looks crap!