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Damp proofing a con...
 

Damp proofing a concrete floor repair

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My workshop was a miners cottage once. At some point in the past the row of cottages were converted into small industrial units and a that point a concrete floor screed was poured. At some point after that a brick partition wall was removed and replaced with a low stud wall counter. Ive now removed that and its revealed a gap in the floor where the brickwork used to be.

Theres a plastic membrane under the screed - but theres a gap in that membrane now that the wall is gone - and materials in that gap , beneath the level of the plastic, is fairly damp.

I want to fill the gap but don't want it to be a source of damp - what would your trick to fix that gap in the plastic before I fill it? Or should a use an additive in the concrete? Or use something other than concrete


 
Posted : 11/01/2024 6:31 pm
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Clean up all the dust and chunks of concrete. Vacuum it too. You'll need to ideally tape* the membrane together but hard to determine with all the debris there as how wide the gap is. If the gap is quite wide then a membrane laid in the gap and tape that to the existing and fill the gap in between.

*Use an appropriate membrane tape.


 
Posted : 11/01/2024 8:09 pm
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Could try and expose more of the membrane and try n glue a patch in.

If its just a workshop id concrete it with an additive n try it


 
Posted : 11/01/2024 8:10 pm
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Was the stud wall floor plate damp when you pulled it up? And how critical is lack of dampness to your workshop?

I'd be tempted by a tanking slurry poured into the gap and then once it's dry level up with screed. I'm not a builder though so take that with a pinch of salt


 
Posted : 11/01/2024 8:40 pm
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When do I add the pinch of salt ? ๐Ÿ™‚

There was a bit of damp under the floor plate - the debris in the gap in the floor is plasterboard, not concrete so the grey-ness indicates how moist it is (and the wall was taken down a few weeks ago)

It's an unheated workshop mainly for joinery - the less inherent damp the better just to minimise stored materials being spoiled - stuff like birch suffers in damp conditions.

So the less damp comimg up the better - Its a 6ft long repair and the bottom of the cut is one brick wide so not a huge breach in the floor


 
Posted : 11/01/2024 9:14 pm
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Remove detritus thoroughly.
Tape a roll of flashband and in there. Buy the one with the adhesive.
Then add a waterproofer like sbr to your concrete mix .
If you really want to go for it paint with Thompson water seal afterwards


 
Posted : 11/01/2024 9:56 pm
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Ooh - flash band - good call - because the plastic is a bit scrapy and cockled I was trying to thing what would stick to it well and something quite gooy like flashband sounds just the job (and I think Ive got some somewhere)


 
Posted : 11/01/2024 10:05 pm
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Flash band sticky side up. Plastic pressed down onto it. Taking from above to seal any holes left.


 
Posted : 11/01/2024 11:04 pm
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Flash band sticky side up

Like your thinking


 
Posted : 11/01/2024 11:19 pm
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When are we going to see your bunker?


 
Posted : 12/01/2024 7:25 am
 Bear
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Thoroughly clean it out and use some kind of bitumen or tar based product? They used to use bitumen as a damp course in years gone by.


 
Posted : 12/01/2024 7:42 am
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When are we going to see your bunker?

No-one ever sees it - thats the point!.

๐Ÿ™‚

that project is sort of on a back burner at present. Been working away from home too much.


 
Posted : 12/01/2024 8:58 am
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Remove all loose stuff, dust, apply liquid DPC product to seal and bind in the existing membranes and finish with a suitable concrete repair compound


 
Posted : 12/01/2024 9:41 am
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that project is sort of on a back burner at present. Been working away from home too much.

That's some back burner... How long have you had it 😁


 
Posted : 12/01/2024 1:00 pm