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"Controlling Unwanted Moisture" an Historic Preservation Brief August 29, 2008


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Controlling Unwanted Moisture
in Historic Buildings

Sharon C. Park, AIA
Controlling Unwanted Moisture

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Introduction

Remedial Actions within an Historic Preservation Context

How and Where to Look for Damaging Moisture

Looking for Signs

Uncovering and Analyzing Moisture Problems

Transport or Movement of Moisture

Surveying and Diagnosing Moisture Damage: Key Questions to Ask

Selecting an Appropriate Level of Treatment

Ongoing Care

Conclusion

Selected Reading

Glossary

Acknowledgments


Return to the Knowledge Base

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Looking for Signs

Identifying the type of moisture damage and discovering its source or sources usually involves the human senses of sight, smell, hearing, touch, and taste combined with intuition. Some of the more common signs of visible as well as hidden moisture damage, include:

  • Presence of standing water, mold, fungus, or mildew
  • Wet stains, eroding surfaces, or efflorescence (salt deposits) on interior and exterior surfaces
  • Flaking paint and plaster, peeling wallpaper, or moisture blisters on finished surfaces
  • Dank, musty smells in areas of high humidity or poorly ventilated spaces
  • Rust and corrosion stains on metal elements, such as anchorage systems and protruding roof nails in the attic
  • Cupped, warped, cracked, or rotted wood
  • Spalled, cracked masonry or eroded mortar joints
  • Faulty roofs and gutters including missing roofing slates, tiles, or shingles and poor condition of flashing or gutters
  • Condensation on window and wall surfaces
  • Ice dams in gutters, on roofs, or moisture in attics

Uncovering and Analyzing Moisture Problems

Moisture comes from a variety of external sources. Most problems begin as a result of the weather in the form of rain or snow, from high ambient relative humidity, or from high water tables. But some of the most troublesome moisture damage in older buildings may be from internal sources, such as leaking plumbing pipes, components of heating, cooling, and climate control systems, as well as sources related to use or occupancy of the building. In some cases, moisture damage may be the result of poorly designed original details, such as projecting outriggers in rustic structures that are vulnerable to rotting, and may require special treatment. The five most common sources of unwanted moisture include:

  • Above grade exterior moisture entering the building
  • Below grade ground moisture entering the building
  • Leaking plumbing pipes and mechanical equipment
  • Interior moisture from household use and climate control systems
  • Water used in maintenance and construction materials.

Above grade exterior moisture generally results from weather related moisture entering through deteriorating materials as a result of deferred maintenance, structural settlement cracks, or damage from high winds or storms.


Damp interior plaster around windows generally indicates moisture has entered from the outside. Photo: NPS files.
Such sources as faulty roofs, cracks in walls, and open joints around window and door openings can be corrected through either repair or limited replacement. Due to their age, historic buildings are notoriously "drafty," allowing rain, wind, and damp air to enter through missing mortar joints; around cracks in windows, doors, and wood siding; and into uninsulated attics. In some cases, excessively absorbent materials, such as soft sandstone, become saturated from rain or gutter overflows, and can allow moisture to dampen interior surfaces. Vines or other vegetative materials allowed to grow directly on building materials without trellis or other framework can cause damage from roots eroding mortar joints and foundations as well as dampness being held against surfaces. In most cases, keeping vegetation off buildings, repairing damaged materials, replacing flashings, rehanging gutters, repairing downspouts, repointing mortar, caulking perimeter joints around windows and doors, and repainting surfaces can alleviate most sources of unwanted exterior moisture from entering a building above grade.


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