Given the huge volume of rainfall that can drop on your home and the surrounding soil, well-functioning gutters and drainage systems are essential to prevent water from entering your home or damaging your foundation.
Drain water and sump water should be piped away from your home, either into the public storm sewer system, if available, or to the lowest part of your property.
Be sure to verify and comply with your local runoff codes for discharging this water responsibly.
Roof Gutters are Important Gutters are used to keep rain water from dripping down and accumulating around your home's foundation.
If the soil around your home becomes saturated with water, extra pressure is placed on your basement walls.
This can eventually cause your house to settle and can actually cause your basement walls to shift or bend inward, leading to structural damage.
Additionally, water can begin to seep into your basement.
Excess water draining into the soil around your home is an especially serious problem if you happen to live in an area with poor draining soil, such as soil with a high clay content.
Assuming your basement has no leaks, the bulk of the rain water that enters the soil near your foundation will be pumped away by your sump pump.
It is important to make sure that your sump pump discharges this water as far as possible from your house, so that it does not simply re-enter the soil near your foundation and get recycled back into your basement, overworking your pump.
French Drains and Footing Drains Use a French drain in your yard to direct water away from your foundation during heavy rains when the ground gets saturated.
A French drain is a tunnel containing stone and a perforated pipe, dug in a downward sloping grade.
It is especially useful for keeping water from traveling toward your house from a high point in your yard.
The trench diverts water that would otherwise be moving toward your foundation.
Most foundations have footing drains installed during initial construction.
These systems of pipes, gravel, and a filtering material collect water near your foundation and redirect it, to prevent it from gathering at the exterior base of the foundation wall.
If you find that water levels near your foundation seem high, find the outlets from your footing drainage and for any existing French drain systems you may have.
Be sure these drain lines still function well.
Clear the pipes if you detect that the water flow is restricted.
Check these pipes during, or immediately after, heavy rainfall to confirm that water is flowing properly.
The topography of your lot is an important aspect of effective ground water control.
Where possible, you want the grade of your property to slope away from your house so that water is naturally diverted away from it.
Drain water and sump water should be piped away from your home, either into the public storm sewer system, if available, or to the lowest part of your property.
Be sure to verify and comply with your local runoff codes for discharging this water responsibly.
Roof Gutters are Important Gutters are used to keep rain water from dripping down and accumulating around your home's foundation.
If the soil around your home becomes saturated with water, extra pressure is placed on your basement walls.
This can eventually cause your house to settle and can actually cause your basement walls to shift or bend inward, leading to structural damage.
Additionally, water can begin to seep into your basement.
Excess water draining into the soil around your home is an especially serious problem if you happen to live in an area with poor draining soil, such as soil with a high clay content.
Assuming your basement has no leaks, the bulk of the rain water that enters the soil near your foundation will be pumped away by your sump pump.
It is important to make sure that your sump pump discharges this water as far as possible from your house, so that it does not simply re-enter the soil near your foundation and get recycled back into your basement, overworking your pump.
French Drains and Footing Drains Use a French drain in your yard to direct water away from your foundation during heavy rains when the ground gets saturated.
A French drain is a tunnel containing stone and a perforated pipe, dug in a downward sloping grade.
It is especially useful for keeping water from traveling toward your house from a high point in your yard.
The trench diverts water that would otherwise be moving toward your foundation.
Most foundations have footing drains installed during initial construction.
These systems of pipes, gravel, and a filtering material collect water near your foundation and redirect it, to prevent it from gathering at the exterior base of the foundation wall.
If you find that water levels near your foundation seem high, find the outlets from your footing drainage and for any existing French drain systems you may have.
Be sure these drain lines still function well.
Clear the pipes if you detect that the water flow is restricted.
Check these pipes during, or immediately after, heavy rainfall to confirm that water is flowing properly.
The topography of your lot is an important aspect of effective ground water control.
Where possible, you want the grade of your property to slope away from your house so that water is naturally diverted away from it.
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