BUGGAR:
I’d read Joe Lstiburek’s article twice, and give it some serious thought while doing the reading, so you got the full meaning and thinking behind it. Joe’s a pretty damn smart fellow on these types of matters. He’s spent most of his life thinking about them, and doing some publishing and consulting on them too. The fact that he’s a Consulting Engineer on building envelope matters should not detract from (but rather add to) the value of his thinking on these issues. We need more real thinking engineers like him, and we would have a lot less water and moisture problems with our bldgs.
Canwesteng:
Excess moister in the crawl space sure may raise hell on the building itself and on the floor sheathing and joists in particular. As long as you have no objection to mold and mushrooms in the crawl space, all is well.
Many times, venting alone is not a very good solution, since you have moist outside air moving through a slightly cooler space than the outside temps and you can end up with a higher relative humidity in the crawl space and with condensation on surfaces down there. Sometimes venting is enough, if you don’t have a high perched water table or other water issues. The latest thinking is drain tile, outside and around the footings; water proof, not just damp proof the found. walls; vapor barrier under the bsmt./crawl spa. slab; all tied together to keep water and moisture out. And finally, to condition the crawl spa./bsmt. with some air from the house moving through and out, taking any moisture with it. These can all be adjusted depending upon the local soils, temps, RH, and rainfall, but don’t just blow them off.
Jimtheengineer10:
Since the contractor is the one who shot the bull, let him fix it, it was shown on the plans he was working from right or guarantee that there will never be a problem if he leaves it as is. Have him condition the crawl spa. and pay for some years of the system operation. That may be less costly for him than tearing it out and doing it right, if other things indicate that this may be a reasonable solution. Treatment from the inside may not be very effective. Moisture and vapor pressures can be pretty high and just push through any inner treatment.