CQHixi
Military
- Dec 3, 2009
- 3
Looking for advice on how to fix this issue. I live in an area that has a lot of clay in the soil, which makes water flow pretty easily over the top of the ground. However, my crawlspace is primarily sand, with a plastic sheet over the top of it (pretty standard). The sand used under the plastic sheet is dry under the middle of the house, but it slopes toward the foundation at the perimeter. This has caused what appears to be a trench on 2 of my outer walls, which fills with water whenever it rains.
The landscaping on the opposite side of the foundation, in the yard, is sloped away from the house--in fact the top of the ground outside the foundation is 4" - 6" higher than the 'trenchline' near the foundation in the crawlspace. There is quite a bit of landscaping, which has replaced the normally clay-laden soil with topsoil and such, but even though that soil is high near the house and slopes away from it, the water is finding its way under my house. I've pumped out the standing water, only to see water bubble back through the foundation in once spot--I think I have ground water in the soil outside the foundation that is seeking a low point and finding its way through my foundation to the trench in my crawlspace.
A friend has suggested buying a few tons of sand to blow in and fill the trench around the perimeter, essentially building up the edges of the crawlspace to be higher than the level of soil in the yard, potentially raising the entire level of the crawlspace if need be. Will this work?
The landscaping on the opposite side of the foundation, in the yard, is sloped away from the house--in fact the top of the ground outside the foundation is 4" - 6" higher than the 'trenchline' near the foundation in the crawlspace. There is quite a bit of landscaping, which has replaced the normally clay-laden soil with topsoil and such, but even though that soil is high near the house and slopes away from it, the water is finding its way under my house. I've pumped out the standing water, only to see water bubble back through the foundation in once spot--I think I have ground water in the soil outside the foundation that is seeking a low point and finding its way through my foundation to the trench in my crawlspace.
A friend has suggested buying a few tons of sand to blow in and fill the trench around the perimeter, essentially building up the edges of the crawlspace to be higher than the level of soil in the yard, potentially raising the entire level of the crawlspace if need be. Will this work?