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Your Place: Re-Coating a Foundation Interior

Home Consumer
By Alan J. Heavens
March 18, 2013
Reading Time: 2 mins read

stone foundation(MCT)—Q: Our 1920s Colonial has a stone foundation with some sort of cement coating on the interior. Much of the coating has flaked off, exposing the mortar joints, which are disintegrating.

We recently had a sump pump and French drain installed in the basement, which will eliminate much of the dampness from minor water leaks.

What would be the best process to re-coat the interior walls of the foundation?

A: It’s nostalgia time, and to answer the question, I return to the basement of another of my houses, which had a stone foundation and something that perpetually flaked off the walls.

When the builders of houses in the late 19th and early 20th centuries wanted to do something cost-effective with the clay soil excavated from digging a home’s foundation, they had the workers mix it with lime and used it to plaster the inside basement walls.

These construction materials must have begun turning to reddish powder in a matter of years, and gathering on the edges of the inside walls — at least, that’s where I was sweeping it up in the house I once owned that was built in 1904.

In the mid-1990s, I helped a church’s youth group that spent several months of the year preparing to work on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota.

To gain experience, we rehabbed houses with soon-to-be homeowners for Habitat for Humanity, and every house we worked on had these crumbling basement walls. That’s when the Habitat people introduced some of the teenagers to pargeting.

Pargeting comes from a French word meaning “to coat a surface with plaster.” The technique is easily learned.

What we were told was that the soil-lime interior coating had been designed to be replaceable, since its purpose was to shift when the exterior stone expanded and contracted during normal freeze-and-thaw cycles.

No one bothered to pass on the information to subsequent generations of owners, and these interior walls started to flake off.

This isn’t a flaw; this is the way the coating was designed. To fix, our instructors told us:

Check the pointing on the stone on the exterior wall. If it is loose or missing, it needs to be replaced because moisture will cause havoc with the interior walls.

The interior walls should first be cleaned with a wire brush to get all the loose material off so that the new coating will adhere to it.

Then, mix one part Portland cement, three-quarters part limestone, and an amount of sand no less than 2.5 times and no more than four times greater than the amount of cement. (For 10 pounds of cement, that works out to 7.5 pounds of limestone and 25 to 40 pounds of sand.) Add water until the mixture is the consistency of pancake batter.

Wet the surface of the wall, and spread the mixture on — not too thick — with a trowel. If it doesn’t bond to the surface, there could be too much water.

Never mix more than you can use in 30 minutes.

©2013 The Philadelphia Inquirer

Distributed by MCT Information Services

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Beth McGuire

Beth McGuire

Recently promoted to Vice President, Online Editorial, Beth McGuire oversees the editorial direction and content of RISMedia’s websites, and its daily, weekly and monthly newsletters. Through her two decades with the company, she has also contributed her range of editorial and creative skills to the company’s publications, content marketing platforms, events and more.

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