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Drench Warfare Down Below

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No sooner did I step through the doorway of the tool rental

department at The Home Depot in South Setauket than the man behind the counter

said: "If you're looking for submersible pumps, we're all out."

This was a couple of weeks ago, when rainstorms and melting snow deposited

water into many Long Island basements. Tool rental centers were deluged with

customers looking to pump out their basements. "It was crazy here," said Ed

Mondini, owner of Gold Star Rental in Centereach. "Pumps were coming and going

pretty quick. As fast as people returned them, we sent them out again."

Perhaps my help- me look prompted the counterman's assumption that I, too,

was knee-deep in water. My trip to Home Depot only involved a search for

kitchen cabinet hardware - the tool-rental section was nothing more than a

shortcut.

My basement is dry - in fact, it has never flooded. Others aren't so lucky.

For those homeowners seeing Noah in their nightmares, there's hope. Portable

submersible pumps, which can be rented for about $15 for eight hours, offer a

temporary reprieve. Such pumps can remove water quickly - as much as 3,200

gallons an hour. That's enough to flood a 12-by-12-foot room to nearly 3 feet.

But obviously, these pumps are stopgap measures. Unless the source of the

water is eliminated, the basement is sure to get wet again.

Keeping a basement dry during periods of heavy rain could be as simple as

inspecting your roofing system: Roof water can leak because of old, cracked and

missing shingles, or it can seep behind above-ground walls because of sagging

gutters and missing downspouts. So much water can collect around the foundation

that it leads to basement flooding. Basements also can get wet because of the

grade around the foundation. Soil should be graded to slope away from

foundation walls. But don't build the slope so high that it covers the wall

entirely; a minimum of 6 inches should be exposed.

Despite all these efforts, water can still invade. "Basements are not built

to be waterproof, that's really the bottom line," says Vincent Boccia, one of

the brothers in Boccia Brothers, a Garden City Park company that has handled

basement water problems since 1955. One of the major factors, he says, is soil.

Foundations surrounded by clay soil are more likely to have leaks than those

surrounded by sand or loamy soil. That's because clay holds moisture, causing a

pressure buildup. When this happens, water is forced into foundation cracks

and joints by hydrostatic pressure. Sandy soil - like mine - or gravel-filled

soil allows water to drain more freely, reducing the chance for hydrostatic

pressure.

The long-term solution most likely is a professionally installed basement

drainage system. Such systems are applied to the exterior of one wall or around

the interior of the foundation wall where it meets the basement slab.

Waterproofing a single exterior foundation wall from the outside can be

expensive - as much as $5,000 per wall. Soil must be excavated to expose the

entire foundation wall. Then a waterproof coating is applied to the wall. A

perforated pipe is placed in a bed of gravel at the bottom of the wall. Water

collects in this pipe and is slowly dispersed into the soil, reducing

hydrostatic pressure.

A more reliable process, Boccia says, is a subfloor drainage system, in

which the section of the interior basement floor that butts up against the

foundation wall is cut away. Soil is removed, then replaced with a perforated

plastic pipe in an envelope of gravel. The pipe runs around the edge of the

wall and floor to an automatic sump pump. Pipe and gravel are covered with

concrete, so when hydrostatic pressure forces water through the foundation or

slab, it is collected in the pipe, then drains to the sump pump. A subfloor

system can cost between $3,000 and $5,000, depending on the size of your house.

If you're building a new home, figure about half the cost.

Many of the calls the Boccia Brothers fielded during the heavy rains

earlier this month came from homeowners who were dealing with wet basements for

the first time.

"This is the first time in the six or seven years they've lived in their

homes that they've had water," Joe Boccia said.

It may not be the last time. Spring thaws could mean even more wet

basements across Long Island.

For more information on waterproofing basement foundations, visit The

Concrete Network's Web site, www.concretenetwork.com/concrete/

waterproofing_concrete_ foundations.

Although he cannot always respond, Gary Dymski welcomes letters. Write to

him in care of Newsday Home Work, 235 Pinelawn Rd., Melville, NY 11747- 4250 or

e-mail gary.dymski@newsday .com. Include your community of residence.

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