Hi,
Looking for some advice on a damp issue. I live in a ground floor flat with a cavity brick wall. Its a 3 story building, presume the age to be 1970s. The corner in question is outside facing.
Its a rented flat, but trying to persuade the maintenance for the building that it is more than a problem of me breathing too much!
Issues
Mould growing on the wall and back of furniture near the corner. Hugh amounts of condensation on the window (double glazed but with no air vent), literally use a squeegee each morning to clear it. Paint peeled off the wall in small places.
Outside
There are 2 drainpipes that go into the ground at this corner, can't see any sign of them overflowing. But to me the most likely culprit is the crack in the outer wall that goes the entire height of the building. Its pretty much a straight line virtually the entire way, i.e. its cut through bricks. Apart from that, the wall looks dry from the outside.
My theory, could moisture be getting into the cavity through this crack, get warmed up by heat from within the property and condenses on the the inside of the outer wall? Hence water dribbles down inside the cavity, hits the damp proof course and then causes damp on the inner wall?
Thanks for any advice people can offer
Kieron
Looking for some advice on a damp issue. I live in a ground floor flat with a cavity brick wall. Its a 3 story building, presume the age to be 1970s. The corner in question is outside facing.
Its a rented flat, but trying to persuade the maintenance for the building that it is more than a problem of me breathing too much!
Issues
Mould growing on the wall and back of furniture near the corner. Hugh amounts of condensation on the window (double glazed but with no air vent), literally use a squeegee each morning to clear it. Paint peeled off the wall in small places.
Outside
There are 2 drainpipes that go into the ground at this corner, can't see any sign of them overflowing. But to me the most likely culprit is the crack in the outer wall that goes the entire height of the building. Its pretty much a straight line virtually the entire way, i.e. its cut through bricks. Apart from that, the wall looks dry from the outside.
My theory, could moisture be getting into the cavity through this crack, get warmed up by heat from within the property and condenses on the the inside of the outer wall? Hence water dribbles down inside the cavity, hits the damp proof course and then causes damp on the inner wall?
Thanks for any advice people can offer
Kieron