quicksandfarmer
Elite Member
I'm trying to think of the best way to tape to a fieldstone foundation that will stay as long as I want it to, and then come off.
Some background: I have a house built circa 1870 with a fieldstone foundation. Since I bought it the basement has had a moisture problem, and periodically (every few years) the water table rises and it floods.
About a ago I rented a concrete cutting saw and cut a trench around the inside perimeter and installed drains and a sump pump. That was a job! The sump pump runs fairly often and the basement hasn't flooded since then, but I'm not sure if it's just because the water table hasn't risen or if what I did really works.
It is still quite damp down there -- typically 85-90% humidity. The next step would be to seal everything. However, I want to make sure that the drains are sufficient before I do that, because otherwise sealing would trap water behind the wall and make things worse. In the meantime I want to do a temporary sealing using plastic sheeting. I figure that will stay up for at least another year, maybe longer.
So far I haven't been able to get anything to hold sheeting to the walls. I have an idea that I think will work, which is to put a layer of 4" flexible flashing (i.e. Vycor) along the wall above grade, and then tape the plastic to it with Tyvek tape. I'm pretty sure that will hold, Vycor sticks to anything and Tyvek tape sticks to Vycor. The one concern I have is that eventually I'm going to want to take it off, and I worry that the Vycor won't come off my beautiful antique walls.
Any thoughts on alternatives?
Thanks.
Some background: I have a house built circa 1870 with a fieldstone foundation. Since I bought it the basement has had a moisture problem, and periodically (every few years) the water table rises and it floods.
About a ago I rented a concrete cutting saw and cut a trench around the inside perimeter and installed drains and a sump pump. That was a job! The sump pump runs fairly often and the basement hasn't flooded since then, but I'm not sure if it's just because the water table hasn't risen or if what I did really works.
It is still quite damp down there -- typically 85-90% humidity. The next step would be to seal everything. However, I want to make sure that the drains are sufficient before I do that, because otherwise sealing would trap water behind the wall and make things worse. In the meantime I want to do a temporary sealing using plastic sheeting. I figure that will stay up for at least another year, maybe longer.
So far I haven't been able to get anything to hold sheeting to the walls. I have an idea that I think will work, which is to put a layer of 4" flexible flashing (i.e. Vycor) along the wall above grade, and then tape the plastic to it with Tyvek tape. I'm pretty sure that will hold, Vycor sticks to anything and Tyvek tape sticks to Vycor. The one concern I have is that eventually I'm going to want to take it off, and I worry that the Vycor won't come off my beautiful antique walls.
Any thoughts on alternatives?
Thanks.