This process has been very interesting to watch. We chose the precast foundation walls for a few reasons – mainly being speed of construction and quality control. I don’t think there is any way to guarantee you will have a completely dry basement but there are a lot of measures you can take to give you the best chance at it. I’ve lived in homes that had both traditional block and poured in place concrete walls. Rusty grew up in a basement home that had poured in place concrete walls. We both had opinions going into the selection process based off of those experiences. We also talked to several contractors and individuals who had the different types of basement walls.
The house I grew up in that had a block basement and crawl space leaked like a sieve – I remember dehumidifiers running in the basement and several inches of water in the basement at one point. The next home that had poured in place concrete walls with a daylight basement was completely dry and never really felt like a “basement.” Rusty’s experience was similar – he grew up in a poured in place concrete basement home. This home was built in the late 1970s and his parents did not have any water issues until those massive rains we had last spring. What we’ve learned is that regardless of the system, it really comes down to installation. You can have the most high tech system but if it’s installed incorrectly, it won’t work. Likewise, you can have a traditional system that will perform beautifully if you pay attention to detail and protect it appropriately.
HINDSIGHT IS 20/20: I know absolutely nothing about construction…but I’m learning. Visit your site frequently and study the process. I love that I know where my drainage tile is, how it works, and what is going on under my home;-)

















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