Hi all,
I have a question about a moisture problem - not sure if this is the right place to put my question.
We have a house in The Netherlands - built in 1926 - masonry outer walls, about 22 cms thick. The ground is clay - and groundwater levels are during winter often high. We have a wooden floor and the floor lays on wooden beams which lay in the masonry walls under the floor. The distance between floor and ground is about 40 centimeters.
During the winter, we have condensation problems as the beams which lay in the walls, and carry the floor, are moist, especially where they lay in the wall under the floor. There are also a lot of yellow salts to be seen on the under floor wall surfaces. I think these come from the mortar and / or ground
water (we live close to the coast).
There are natural ventilation openings in the outer walls under the floor and we always keep them open so there is natural ventilation.
But there is one company / guy here, who is ecologist, who says one
should stop the natural ventilation as this cools down the outer walls and moves the warmer crawl-space air out and during it's movement out it hits the colder walls and condensate. His opinion is to close all natural ventilation holes in the outer walls and insulte / cover the ground, so no groundwater can evaporate anymore. He adivces to use polyethylene screen, or aerated
concrete.
Personally I doubt about his adivice and adviced materials. Personally I would prever sea-shells as ground covering to polyethylene screen or aerated concrete - as sea shells are natural. But this ecologist tells me sea shells are not water vapour proof which could be true.
I measured water content of 1 floor beam close to the under floor wall and I measured 33% moisture content on the surface. The
wood is treated / painted and looks ok. 1 floor tile close to an inner wall has water stains and I remove the salts on the wall close to the floor tile, but these stains still feel moist.
I would like to preserve my old home and I don't like modern materials like concrete and plastics (although some parts of our home have - originally - concrete from 1926).
There are a lot of different opinions about how to treat moisture problems / high groundwater levels in crawling spaces. I'm wondering if there is anyone here who can give me some advice? It seems like a very difficult thing to tackle... I'm aware my
local conditions can be very different to that of most readers on this forum as I live in The Netherlands. During winter temperatures are about 0 - 10 degrees Centigrade (32 - 50 Fahrenheit), and winters are getting more and more moist.