rkash74
Structural
- Jan 17, 2015
- 4
this is actually a question from a homeowner to emmgjld because I live in Denver and you seem familiar with our semi-arid, sometimes wet area.
we've had significant cracking in our basement. 2 structural engineers have said it is not structural but the house has clearly shifted and some flooring has settled. we connected our roof gutter spouts to a french drain on one side, but need to figure out what we can do on the other side to address water. i'd like some thought on repair.
but my big question is that we had a realtor out who said that once water is under a foundation it "mascerates" the foundation, essentially destroying it even if you fix the drainage issues. is that true? does water stay forever under a foundation in dry Colorado?
we've had significant cracking in our basement. 2 structural engineers have said it is not structural but the house has clearly shifted and some flooring has settled. we connected our roof gutter spouts to a french drain on one side, but need to figure out what we can do on the other side to address water. i'd like some thought on repair.
but my big question is that we had a realtor out who said that once water is under a foundation it "mascerates" the foundation, essentially destroying it even if you fix the drainage issues. is that true? does water stay forever under a foundation in dry Colorado?