According to Douglas Kent, SPAB Technical Secretary, the inappropriate installation
of damp-proof courses to combat rising damp accounts for much unnecessary work
on old buildings. True rising damp is rarer than commonly perceived but is regularly
misdiagnosed.
Q. What is rising damp?
A. Rising damp is the upward movement of moisture through walls and sometimes floors
by capillary action from below the ground. It can rise to 900mm or more in walls,
depending on the masonry type, water-table level and evaporation rate. Salt deposits
generally form a horizontal tide-mark, below which there is discoloration. Floors
can display moist patches and staining. Rising damp is distinct from other forms
of dampness, such as rain penetration and condensation, which require different
solutions.
Q. Is rising damp common in old buildings?
A. Rising damp is commoner in old buildings than new ones but rarer than often
supposed. Modern buildings keep water out with a system of barriers: damp-proof
courses (DPCs) have been required in walls since 1875 and damp-proof membranes
(DPMs) in floors from the 1960’s. Most old buildings lack these and therefore
damp rises to some degree. This is usually not a problem where the construction
can ‘breathe’, allowing evaporation, and may actually be advantageous in humidifying
overly-dry centrally-heated buildings. Excessive dampness arises where the moisture
equilibrium is disturbed, as with misguided attempts to seal surfaces.
Q. How is rising damp diagnosed?
A. Rising damp is widely misdiagnosed on the basis of high electrical moisture
meter readings alone. Elevated readings occur not infrequently in old buildings
that are virtually dry, due to salt deposition from evaporation, or can indicate
another problem altogether, such as penetration from rainsplash. If rising damp
exists, there will be visible indications too, such as an accompanying tide-mark,
but not, for example, the external green staining symptomatic of rain penetration.
High nitrate concentrations are likely. Tests to determine moisture levels within
the wall thickness can help rule out surface condensation.
Q. What if I believe a damp diagnosis to be wrong?
A. In the SPAB’s experience, mortgage lenders can demand unnecessary damp-proofing
work during house purchases. Although chartered surveyors have a duty to follow
a trail of suspicion, some simply pass all responsibility onto remedial treatment
contractors with a vested commercial interest encouraging over-specification.
It is worth challenging any recommendation you believe is questionable and, if
necessary, seeking a second opinion in writing from an independent chartered surveyor
or consultant (note, not contractor). The SPAB may be able to advise you on suitable
names.
Q. How can I control rising damp?
A. Measures that help your building ‘breathe’, such as replacing hard cement render
or pointing with a more suitable lime-based mortar, may be the best solution.
Conversely, applying water-proof renders and coatings can exacerbate damp problems.
Where a floor has a DPM that is displacing moisture into the bottoms of walls,
this might be replaced with a ‘breathable’ construction. Alternatively, a ‘breathing’
strip for evaporation may be cut through the floor around the room perimeter and
infilled with a material such as lime concrete or grated over. Externally, ground
works and improved drainage can assist.
Q. Is a retrofit damp-proof course really necessary?
A. There should be a presumption against retrospective DPC’s, which, inappropriately
installed, can be damaging, ineffective and an unnecessary expense. They can have
a role, though, perhaps where, say, irreversible alterations mean a building is
effectively now functioning as a modern sealed structure. When selecting a DPC
system and it is not feasible to insert a physical DPC, the SPAB suggests following
BRE’s advice to consider only methods that have been awarded an Agrement or other
third-party certificate. Chemical injection is the only method that currently
satisfies this requirement. Physical and chemical DPC’s, however, should be avoided
in earth buildings, where major structural damage can result, and treatment is
difficult in flint and rubble-cored walls.
Q. What about plaster repairs on a previously damp wall?
A. Lime plaster should normally be used for any repairs. Salt-resistant plasters
are favoured instead by many DPC installers but tend to just temporarily disguise
continuing damp problems and may require listed building consent. A poultice of
whiting and water is an old method of removing patches of residual salts from
plasterwork. Decoration with paints such as limewash and soft distemper, where
possible, will maximise ‘breathability’.
Further Reading
Understanding Dampness: Effects, Causes, Diagnosis and Remedies, by P Trotman, C Sanders and H Harrison, BRE, 2004.
Diagnosing Damp, by R Burkinshaw and M Parrett, RICS, 2003.