If your basement is an ideal space for
the couch potatoes in your life, you’re not alone.
Millions of people across Quebec and
Canada use their basements as living space, thinking it’s the ideal space to
set up a family room, games room, or even kids’ bedrooms.
But in truth, it takes a great deal of
careful design and maintenance to avoid water and moisture infiltration in even
the best cases. And oftentimes, moisture accumulation results as a nasty–and
often costly–surprise to the hapless homeowner.
Recently, I heard a news report about a
woman living in Laval whose basement was flooded when the sewers backed up. The
insurance company covered the losses of about $50,000 and the basement was repaired.
Not long after, it happened again even though she had installed a backwater
valve meant to prevent the sewage from entering the house. This time the
insurance company refused to pay.
A
little history about basements
Up until about the 1950s, residential
basements were rarely “finished” for use as living space as they often are
today, and with good reason.
Before about 1900, basements were mostly
used as cellars; storage for items such as preserves, wine, and yes, potatoes.
Then, as we started to install furnaces, electrical and plumbing systems, the
basement was replaced as a natural cellar.
Expensive houses were built with full height basements, while more
modest housing had a crawlspace with a dirt floor.
Nowadays, the use of sump pumps and proper
drainage and construction materials have gone a long way towards making
basements comfortable—but in the end, there is only so much one can do to keep
groundwater from seeping in. Some factors are simply outside the homeowner’s
control (such as the surrounding geography and adequacy of the local municipal
sewer and drainage network).
Steps
to Take to Reduce the Risks
With the increasing frequency of severe
weather, we have to be more and more careful with how we handle the surface
water around our homes to reduce moisture.
To help reduce moisture in your
basement;
- Check the grading around the house. It should slope away from the house at least 30 cm within 3 metres of the building.
- Ensure gutters and downspouts are installed, and discharge 2 metres away from the house.
- Install a backwater valve and test its operation every six months.
- Have a plumber check the sump pump installation. It must discharge outside.
- Inspect the garage floor drain and clean it every six months.
Is your house well situated?
Ideally it should be a little higher than the surrounding properties and well away from any river or lake.
Any history of flooding in the area?
Houses in Quebec’s Richelieu valley, for example, should not even have basements.
Does the city have storm water sewers that are separate from the waste sewers?
If not, there is a higher risk of backup in the event of heavy rain.
Does the grading around your house slope away from the house for at least 3 metres?
This helps keeps the water away from the building.
Do all your downspouts discharge at least 2 metres from the house?
90<>percentage<> of water flows away and only 10<>percentage<> soaks in. It is not a good idea to allow the French drain to take care of everything (because it won’t!)
Does the sump pump discharge directly outside to the ditch or the storm drain?
If it discharges directly into the sewer line inside the house, as it does in many houses, then there could be a problem. During a major rainstorm the sewers may become overloaded and start to back up. At that point, the backwater valve should close automatically to protect the house. The sump pump then turns on to remove the accumulating water, but that water has nowhere to go because the sewer pipe is full, so the basement floods anyway.
Think twice before finishing your basement. If in doubt, call a home inspector to look at your situation and advise you on what you have to do to ensure your moisture problems remain at an absolute minimum.
For any other questions, or for more information, please contact Mose Home Inspection Services.