beryl10
Chemical
- Aug 8, 2006
- 14
Hi,
I have a couple questions about french drains. Our property slopes from the street down towards the house and the house sits quite low in the gound, so, not surprisingly, water has always been an issue. We're putting in some french drains in the front of the house to intercept the water and move it off to drain pipes running out the back to a stream. These are being placed about 4 feet away from the foundation. I'm happy with this placement. I think it makes sense.
However, in another area, around the corner on this L-shaped ranch, the contractor is suggesting putting the drains right up next to the foundation of the house. The house has a basement, and I am not talking about drains at the floor of the basement, but at the level of the ground outside. I am wondering if this is a good idea. Isn't the french drain actually drawing water towards it, therefore pulling more water towards the house foundation if there is a 2' deep x 2' wide trench filled w/ gravel right up to it? Maybe all is fine if the drain works properly, but from what I understand, french drains are not the longest lived drain. They do clog up over time.
Next question, he also said that putting geotextile fabric on top of the drain slows down the percolation of water from the top. So, he just cut the fabric right off to the surface, which I don't think was very smart. I'd like to landscape right up to the edge of this trench (make the trench look like a gravel path with stepping stones), and now there's nothing keeping the soil from spilling right in. He just wants to dump river stone on top w/o the fabric barrier. Any thoughts on not completely wrapping these drains? Our soil tends to be on the clayey side, but this drain also abuts quite a bit of amended soil (more loamy and organic)
thanks in advance for comments, expertise, etc.
I have a couple questions about french drains. Our property slopes from the street down towards the house and the house sits quite low in the gound, so, not surprisingly, water has always been an issue. We're putting in some french drains in the front of the house to intercept the water and move it off to drain pipes running out the back to a stream. These are being placed about 4 feet away from the foundation. I'm happy with this placement. I think it makes sense.
However, in another area, around the corner on this L-shaped ranch, the contractor is suggesting putting the drains right up next to the foundation of the house. The house has a basement, and I am not talking about drains at the floor of the basement, but at the level of the ground outside. I am wondering if this is a good idea. Isn't the french drain actually drawing water towards it, therefore pulling more water towards the house foundation if there is a 2' deep x 2' wide trench filled w/ gravel right up to it? Maybe all is fine if the drain works properly, but from what I understand, french drains are not the longest lived drain. They do clog up over time.
Next question, he also said that putting geotextile fabric on top of the drain slows down the percolation of water from the top. So, he just cut the fabric right off to the surface, which I don't think was very smart. I'd like to landscape right up to the edge of this trench (make the trench look like a gravel path with stepping stones), and now there's nothing keeping the soil from spilling right in. He just wants to dump river stone on top w/o the fabric barrier. Any thoughts on not completely wrapping these drains? Our soil tends to be on the clayey side, but this drain also abuts quite a bit of amended soil (more loamy and organic)
thanks in advance for comments, expertise, etc.