If water is actually getting in where you think it is, channeling it away is the best solution. Putting in gravel seems like it’ll just hold more water at that 10” channel unless it’s slopes to allow it to drain out to a lower spot. If you were going to fill with gravel, adding a french drain pipe on the same spot wouldn’t be much more expensive. I’m also not sure grass does a lot for you unless you change the slope of the grass area to slope away from the house.I hope I posted in the right forum (mods feel free to move if not).
We bought the house in 2014. The pool/spa and deck were built in the early 2000s.
We've been dealing with an extremely frustrating problem. Water/moisture is getting under the floors of the house in the rooms adjacent to the deck. Our wood floors in these areas have moisture damage. We've replaced the damaged areas twice and now we will tear out the floors and put in tile.
But onto resolving the source of the moisture...
There are 5 drains throughout the deck which are all functioning.
However, from the right side (left in picture) to the middle of the house, the concrete is poured at a level that is at the top of the foundation. I believe this is allowing any water that misses the drains to seep into the brick and weep holes. The deck then slopes to the left the house (right in picture) and towards the front of the garage. I guess the idea was to get water to flow towards the driveway.
We installed new 6" roof gutters which help quite a bit but it has not resolved the problem.
I can think of three ways to fix this:
1. Tear out 10" of deck along the back of house and put in gravel (no drain).
2. Tear out 10" of deck along the back of the house and put in a channel drain.
3. Tear out a larger portion of the deck (see drawing #2) and put in grass.
#1 would be the least expensive but would it even work? Would #2 hold in a heavy storm or hurricane? #3 seems like a surefire solution but I'm having a hard time figuring out how to make it look good.
Any thoughts, suggestion, or ideas will be appreciated. Thank you.
If water is actually getting in where you think it is, channeling it away is the best solution. Putting in gravel seems like it’ll just hold more water at that 10” channel unless it’s slopes to allow it to drain out to a lower spot. If you were going to fill with gravel, adding a french drain pipe on the same spot wouldn’t be much more expensive. I’m also not sure grass doesn’t a lot for you unless you change the slope of the grass area to slope away from the house.
We haven't seen any signs of foundation damage, like cracks inside the house, windows or doors not shutting, or cracks on the exterior of house. I've walked around the house and there I see no damage to the foundation.This is Houston, it's possible things have moved around and the house is now lower in relation to the deck from where it was originally constructed. It may be worth calling out a foundation company to put a water level on your slab and see if your house shows to be down on the pool side. Not that it would make the resolution any better, because if that's the case you'd need to break up the deck anyway to have the slab piered.
Check with a local contractor who has experience in ground water control.Interesting. We have heavy clay soil and a shallow water table. Do you think a dry well will work here?
Maybe it leaks some into the ground.The overfill goes to a PVC pipe that runs to the street from the side of the house.
That's a lot of water.In the area at the back of the garage which has poor drainage, I can hit water within a foot of digging. In other areas with acceptable drainage, perhaps two feet.
If you've been there 7 years and seen no movement, that's a pretty good sign.We haven't seen any signs of foundation damage, like cracks inside the house, windows or doors not shutting, or cracks on the exterior of house. I've walked around the house and there I see no damage to the foundation.
The house seems low.
Is the house on a slab or crawlspace?
I think that the pool probably floated before the sale of the house and then everything was redone to to make it look as normal as possible.Only three ways that happens: 1. Pool moved up with the deck, evenly, with no failure in the hardscape (highly unlikely),