No, I'm the one with the outhouse. But I wonder if that's the correct word. Just a little room outside the house where you keep bikes, tools, etc.
No, I'm the one with the outhouse. But I wonder if that's the correct word. Just a little room outside the house where you keep bikes, tools, etc.
The standard drainage practice is that one is not supposed to impede the natural flow of water. Therefore, if a wall is built that could possible retain water due to it being in a low area holes should be added to allow the existing drainage flow patterns to remain.
Do you also know about drainage of rooftops.......I have two leaking roofs that are probably caused by the water not finding a way to the ground...........
Well the shed has an inclined concrete roof, with on two sides a flat part. The flat parts have some filtration problems. I have been thinking of make it incline a little bit, but it will mean it will run to the patios of the neighbors, so that's not going to work.What type of roof is it?
Well the shed has an inclined concrete roof, with on two sides a flat part. The flat parts have some filtration problems. I have been thinking of make it incline a little bit, but it will mean it will run to the patios of the neighbors, so that's not going to work.
And then I have a more serious problem. Attached to the house there is a terrace, with a wooding roof. The connection is an inclined concrete roof, (from the house incline down, then a metal canal to have the water removed and than the inclined wooden roof of the terrace. The last beam in concrete (before the metal canal and the wooden roof, has serious filtration problems. I'm not sure yet if it's from rainwater or from a broken tube in the bathroom tthat is on the second floor, diagonally above the area that has the problems. It has leaked when it doesnt rain and also when I removed the pressure from the tubes for a few weeks.
Water in concrete can take a couple of weeks to dry out. Please post a picture of the beam in question. If I understand correctly there is a pipe that runs inside of the column are close by?