Wednesday, 25 July 2007

Rot

One of the largest parts of desirable England is under water. What does that do to house prices?

Another problem is the rot. Wet rot is nasty but dry rot is the black death. Dry rot is caused by a very narrow band of humidity maintained at a fairly narrow band of temperature in buildings that have been soaked. It is prevalent in the central and western parts of England.

The soaking can be due to poor maintenance (usual cause) or flooding. The spores of dry rot are floating about in the air all the time, looking for just that balance between damp and warmth in which to thrive. It grows in wood, but extends itself through mortar, under plaster, across brickwork, and causes structural collapse . It is high on the surveyor's list for any building in the central and western English regions.

It is going to have a field day. To deal with it requires specialised firms who cost the earth and rip out anything within 3 metres, in any direction, of rot evidence - floor boards, plaster, pannelling, windowframes, sashes, ornate plasterwork, structural features....and if there is to be a guarantee against recurrence, then the treatments of what is left require vacating the building for days.

So even when the ruined buildings are dryed out, who would touch them with a bargepole?

Unless great care is taken it gets into the raspberry canes as well.

10 comments:

Newmania said...

I used to have scheme for dry and damp ro removal there is an efficacy risk associated with it .

WE are doing the people who remove Chinese ferns now ..its all such fun is it not

Sen. C.R.O'Blene said...

HG, dry rot is evil when spotted.

When I was a young surveyor, (as opposed to being an old non-surveyor), I only ever saw one new mould growth, and that was in a Victorian house, and growing on the loo window!

It was just ready to burst and really was a foul object.

The smell is the big giveaway, and once you've smelt it; you'll never forget it...rather like the first (and last) paella I ever had...

hatfield girl said...

You would know about the longer term effects of what is happening, S, but to the amateur eye, all this soaked older building stock is going to be a problem for years. People aren't insured. not for dealing with this kind of damage; being broken into by burglars is one thing but being broken into by fouled floodwater is far worse.

They are still repairing parts of Florence forty years on.

Does an'efficacy risk' mean it's likely not to work N? Does that mean all these properties are blighted and impossible to insure?

Anonymous said...

Why hasn't anybody mentioned "fruiting bodies"?

Newmania said...

Fruiting bodies . I claim my night out with HG .

Nick Drew said...

this sudden lurch into practicalities has disoriented me - where's the sustained metaphor, guys ? something rotten, you know the score

I stand poised to join in when the usual abstract standards of service are resumed.

hatfield girl said...

By their fruits shalt thou know them.

Give me a moment to get up the nearest mount, and the entire moral gamut is there to be considered. Bit of a challenge, though, following that.

Sen. C.R.O'Blene said...

Caronte...You're right!

Fruiting bodies are the 'explosion of the spores from the mother mould!

There' I've mentioned it you clever person!

Good post all this is'nt it!

hatfield girl said...

Thinking of Labour and its leader in these terms is not just illuminating - it's revolting! Fruiting bodies - oh yuk, it's the Labour project to perfection.

hatfield girl said...

'The smell is the big giveaway, and once you've smelt it; you'll never forget it.'

That'll be Labour and its Leader, only people in England haven't really smelled totalitarianism and its child democratic centralism, before. They fought it elsewhere but never in their own home.