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Posted

Hi all,

 

I’ve been getting damp coming through the dots/dabs behind the plasterboard in a section that was previously an outer wall. 
 

As in the photos, we previously had a 1st floor walkway between our house and garage and we had builders create an indoor space at ground level below, involving putting in a small pitched roof section (with skylight) under which is an exterior door. 
 

However, since the work was done, the plaster is damp to the touch which seems to be transferring from the old exterior wall behind. You can see the damp and mouldy spots in the pictures.

 

The damp only seems to be on one side (not on the old exterior garage wall) . I asked another builder what they thought and they said I should look into whether it is rising damp or coming from above (eg a leak in the flashing). But I’m not really sure how to do this (eg if I cut the plaster away how will I diagnose the issue) or what the solution would be. 
 

Any advice would be gratefully received. I imagine dot and dab was used  instead of batons because there is only just enough width for the external door. 
 

In case it helps, we had a concrete screed poured on the ground with a waterproof membrane beneath.

 

Thanks

 

 

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Posted

The damp is coming from the stone wall.  The stone is porous and getting wet from rain being blown against it.  You could coat the wall with StormDry, take off the plasterboard, wait a year or 2, then replaster.  If the wall is stone under the plasterboard you could leave it natural stone.

Posted
19 hours ago, Overthefence said:

Thank you. So you don’t think it’d be rising damp then? 

Could be if the wall doesn't have a dpc. How old is the house?

 

Posted (edited)

Absolutely is not "rising damp". Moisture migration from the stone wall, or (less likely) condensation. The inside surface of the wall will need to be ventilated. Doesnt look like you've any width to insulate, so I'd leave the wall bare.

Edited by Conor
Posted
9 hours ago, Conor said:

Absolutely is not "rising damp". Moisture migration from the stone wall, or (less likely) condensation. The inside surface of the wall will need to be ventilated. Doesnt look like you've any width to insulate, so I'd leave the wall bare

+1

Posted

There's likely a mix of cold bridging through the dabs, as well as the wall being 'not dry' and the dabs are then wicking that moisture through the PB. A perfect example of where an insulated plasterboard and meticulous use of the dabs plus closed cell foam around the perimeter would have been the way forward.

Defo not 'rising' damp etc.

 

From what I can see there is plenty of room to use 25mm insulated PB on that wall.

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