Subfloor smell

Joined
2 Jan 2019
Messages
330
Reaction score
8
Country
United Kingdom
I was just wondering is it normal to have a musty smell coming from under the floor. If I lift the carpet it smells. The only thing i can describe it as is musty. Their is no smell anywhere at all but the underneath of carpet can smell and if you smell between the floorboards it smells. Its bare earth underneath. House is a 1930s semi
 
Sponsored Links
Check the below floor air vents are all clear of earth and obstructions. There should be an obvious flow of air from front to back, or side to side under a suspended floor. Check also the under floor timbers for rot.
 
There are two vents at the front under the bay window. One on the side and one at the back where the kitchen is. I'm guessing I may need to add 2 at the back and one at the side where the kitchen is? That way each side has 2 and there is cross ventilation. Is it not normal to have a musty smell with it being earth underneath. Obviously soil and all the stuff that's under has that kind of smell to it
 
They can smell a little musty, but it shouldn't spread the smell into your floor boards and carpets. How is the timber down there?
 
Sponsored Links
That's the vents at the front. There arent any straight facing at the back
 

Attachments

  • 20190421_113726.jpg
    20190421_113726.jpg
    551.5 KB · Views: 254
That's the vents at the front. There arent any straight facing at the back

You have had an injected damp course - the series of holes drilled two courses of bricks below the vent.

Soil etc. should be kept below that row of injected bricks, both inside and outside.
 
I insulated around the floor where the party wall is for soundproofing purposes. This is what it looks like down there. I'd say it was warm weather when I took these pics but no obvious signs of anything I'd say. Only problem is all the air bricks are flagged right up to. So if I put some in at the back the back garden has drainage issues so I dont want water to leak in. Its never reached the house. You know when you move in somewhere and over the years you pick up one problem after the other
 

Attachments

  • 20190103_134408.jpg
    20190103_134408.jpg
    382.7 KB · Views: 329
I know. We have never suffered any damp problems while we lived here. I dont know about previous owners. I know sometimes surveyors can demand the damp course is done to be on the safe side
 
You are smelling mould spores and you do have a problem somewhere. Probably insufficient ventilation in the floor void.
 
It could be dry rot ! Hopefully you haven't got that ......Make sure your existing vents are clear and add
extra ones.

Look under the floor in various places to make sure you haven't got dry rot, a musty mushroom types mell is usually fungi of some sort.
 
Like I said it's an earthy smell. I've been under floors wiring in different houses and they all smell. Clothes smell awful afterwards. So I figured it was normal. I'm hoping the extra vents will help. Well it wont do any harm will it?
 
That's the vents at the front. There arent any straight facing at the back

You say it is a 1930's house. So I'll wager it was built with a DPC. So it should not need chemical injection. The brickwork in your pic looks very good. But at the bottom of your pic I can see an airbrick, close to the paving and obscured by weeds and shadow.

This leads me to suppose that the ground level has been raised since the house was built (this is a very common error by idiots) and may well have bridged the DPC or allowed water to splash up and through the airbricks. Such action frequently leads to damp.

The correct action would be to remove the paving and reduce the ground level next to the house.

You say there are no airbricks at the back of the house. This means there will be no airflow from front to back to ventilate away damp. Maybe the back has also had the ground level raised.

You need to expose or provide ventilation all round the house.
 
You are correct the patio is the exact same at the back. Its level is level with the air bricks. The dpc is above the air bricks. The chemical injection is just above the dpc. I'm guessing for now try to get air bricks in at the back and see if it helps. If not then at some point I will have to lower the flags which is a major job. At the minute at least most water will run away from the house and vents. If I lower the flags the water may pool at the house then. The weeds have been taken care of. Thats quite an old picture
 
Would I be better removing the small paving bricks around the vent and digging down and putting pea gravel down and having it lower than the air brick? I figure with how it is at least most of the water will drain away due to the slope and not pool at the house
 

DIYnot Local

Staff member

If you need to find a tradesperson to get your job done, please try our local search below, or if you are doing it yourself you can find suppliers local to you.

Select the supplier or trade you require, enter your location to begin your search.


Are you a trade or supplier? You can create your listing free at DIYnot Local

 
Sponsored Links
Back
Top