SUPER DRY BASEMENTSTM
(We Wrote The Book On Basement Waterproofing)
If
you are considering Exterior Excavation And Wall Replacement/ Rebuild
You
Owe it to Yourself to:
READ
THIS NOW!!!
Don’t Pay to Rebuild Your Basement Walls
Twice Like Many, Many of our Past Customers Who Hired
Substandard Contractors (Some of them Large Companies With Fancy
Marketing and Slick Salesmen)!!!
In Order to Help You Wade Through All The B.S.
(That’s Baloney Stuff, Folks!) in Your Estimates and Understand
This Kind of Project:
I will Explain How We Re-engineered Super Strong
Wall Re-building Use Techniques Originally Developed By
the Egyptians and Romans Whose Magnificent Achievements Survive To
This Day;
What
Do We DO Differently???
READ
ON To Discover How To
Permanently Erase Your Basement Problems!
Our
Innovative Mortar-less Method Has Been Nationally Tested 5X Stronger
When
it comes to treating a bulging cracked or bowing basement wall most
of the basement companies are completely in the dark! They may have a
few different band-aid type
approaches but most are
ignorant of the basic causes which create the underlying conditions
to allow the walls to crack, heave, shift and buckle.
I
am going to let you in on a SECRET.
Most
Basement Wall Problems Are A Result of Bad Framing …
NOT
BAD MASONRY!
That’s
Right, Bad
Framing.
You see
with a concrete block or other stacked masonry unit wall, the wall
derives its strength from the EVENLY DISTRIBUTED weight of the house
applying pressure and pushing directly down on the top of the walls.
This
even distribution ensures that the heavier the house, the stronger
the lateral load capacity of the wall.
When the
house is applying direct pressure on top of the walls, the evenly
distributed load makes the walls very strong. This is hugely
important. The way that the load transfers onto the wall is via a
board called a sill plate. The sill plate’s job is to transfer
the load of the house directly onto the top of the wall.
When the
sill plate is as wide as the top of the top block the distribution is
even. When the sill plate is smaller or partial there is an un-even
distribution of the load
Resulting
in a wall that is weakened and that will begin to bow bulge and
crack.
A
partial sill plate looks like this.
A
partial sill plate will put all of the pressure on the outside edge
of the block
wall.
This creates a very unstable wall. When other forces and
complicating additional factors or problems are added to the wall, it
can create huge problems!
Other
factors include things like: a nearby tree with branches over the
roof line (means roots pushing on wall) or roof downspouts that
discharge to the base of the wall or a little bit of slight negative
grade towards the house, when coupled with a partial sill plate: the
result is often in total wall
failure. The simple action
in a northern climate of the soil freezing and thawing against the
wall often results in a long horizontal frost line crack developing.
This is extremely aggravated when it is coupled with a partial sill
plate issue.
The
sad truth is that even though many contractors will claim to know how
to do a wall-rebuild or an Underpinning job, almost none of them
would ever even consider correcting the underlying
issue, the
partial sill plate.
I
have seen countless numbers of walls that homeowners just like you
paid tens of thousands of
dollars to rebuild just to
watch their money go up like a puff of smoke because the contractor
rebuilt the wall in the
exact same fashion as the
one that failed already
and was being replaced. In fact they will lay brand new blocks right
up to the partial sill plate which caused the problem in the first
place! Can you imagine paying good money for the exact same thing
that broke already?
I’d
like to tell you a story you’ve got to hear about a job I
recently did for a Mr. Ron Sewyak on state route 20 in Oberlin.
This is
a sad story about a man who had to have his basement fixed THREE
TIMES in ten short years!!!!!
Mr Sewyak had had the walls of
his home rebuilt ten years ago using conventional masonry techniques.
They were rebuilt using 12" blocks and type n mortar. A
conventional parge coat was applied and tar. New tiles and backfill
were added. This is what is considered “outside
waterp-proofing”.
Four years later the walls were
leaking again!!!
Exasperated the homeowner had Ohio State
Waterproofing install their inside outside "waterproofing
system" (inside) and they hoped their problems were over.
Again he
thought his problem was solved!
Sadly,
I met Ron a few months ago.
He asked me to come out to his
house because his basement walls were severely bowed bulging and
shifted off the first course and out of plumb.
I was able to
observe portions of the outside "waterproofing " system
from ten years ago and the inside/outside system from six years ago
both had fatal flaws but…. Neither system was the cause of the
problem.
After careful inspection I assessed the real
problem----BAD FRAMING!!!!
That’s right, it turned out
that the first contractor (who did many things poorly) built the
walls directly back up to and underneath the existing framing
deficiency which caused the
wall system to fail in the first place.
A partial sill plate
and a lack of cribbing on the gable end walls were behind their
basements problems from the beginning.
After the first winter
ten years ago, the newly re-built wall began to crack... this opened
water ways which made the walls leak.
Ron's second contractor
performed an inside system which, while done poorly, also stopped
active water puddles on the floor.
Unfortunately it did
nothing to stop the structural issues, which worsened and worsened,
until he was forced to call me.
So in a ten year period the
walls have been repaired three times!!!!
Can you
imagine???
Fortunately, for Ron I fixed them once and for all
by first correcting the framing issues and repairing the sill plate;
then performing a complete excavation.
Only once the earth was
removed completely; all the way down to the bottom of the footer, was
I able to push the walls back in line and use my surface bonding
structural repair solution. Then of course I applied three
sealants to the wall one damp-proof two of them waterproof.
Then
I replaced the drainage system with new thick wall pipe and stone all
the way to 12" of grade separated from the top soil with filter
fabric!!!!!
So why didn't I fix them from the
inside???
Because in his situation, it would not work; it was
not the source of the problem.
I always tell my customers all
of their options .
Then I tell them
what I would do if I was in their shoes.
Regardless, not all
homeowners can afford an outside system.... worse... most outside
contractors do not know how to install a true WATER-PROOFING
system.
So the poor homeowner is left buying a repair that
involves excavating the wall and using the same techniques that
FAILED ALREADY!!!
There
is good news…
The sill
plate problem can be inexpensively remedied when the wall repair is
being performed. This means you can eliminate the underlying cause
rather than just putting a band- aid on it like a beam or wall anchor
system.
When
a wall has become destabilized due to uneven load distribution (or
other factors), there is only one way to truly rectify the problem,
which is to remove the earth
on the other side of it, that means digit up!!
Then straighten and repair or rebuild it.
The
rebar you see sticking out of the pier was put in at point of
construction, yet this wall in Medina,Ohio still
failed!!!
Why
Rebuilding A Bowed Wall The Mason’s
Way
Can
make It Much
Weaker than
Before!
When
an average, ordinary mason or contractor re-builds a wall they
inevitably actually end up making a new but weaker
wall. That is because when an ordinary wall re-build or under pinning
is done, the new wall has a gap left at the top. That gap is
typically shimmed and then tuck pointed. This changes the load on the
wall from direct pressure to a point load system.
Since
the wall derives its strength from even load distribution… it
results in a much weaker wall!
That
means you’re just throwing away your money. It also leads to
long term plaster cracking and wall
failure.
Our
Unique Super Bond mortar-less wall System is uniquely suited to wall
rebuilds. In fact, we can even remove our jacks as soon as the last
block is set in place!
Did
You Know That the Pyramids Were Actually Built Without ANY Mortar At
ALL
and have been speculated to be over
10,000 Years old!
Over
12 years ago I stumbled onto one of the greatest basement wall
rebuilding secrets,
literally by accident. I discovered how to “glue”
concrete blocks together without using any
mortar between the blocks. The technique was developed in ancient
Roman architecture some of which stands to this day. In fact there
are 2000 year old Roman roads being driven on in Europe even still
today!
Owens
Corning Fiberglass spent millions of dollars testing and proving this
ancient Roman technique and getting it put into nearly every major
building code authority in the late 1960’s. They did tests
proving that a mortared block wall is up to five times weaker than a
surface bonded wall. Or, to put it another way,
our walls are five
times stronger than
ordinary mortared walls, which means you and your family can sleep
safe through the night knowing that they’re as strong as a
fortress!
I began
working with the process twelve years ago and have perfected
structural repair strategies that employ the amazing benefits of the
use of this revolutionary process
The
biggest single difference is the immediate ability to apply pressure
to the wall prior to completing the process. This comes from the fact
that there is no mortar to squish out from between the blocks.
Ordinary masons must build the new wall and leave a gap between the
sill plate and the top of the block. They then beat shims in every
couple of feet and lastly tuck point the gap. This is a horribly
ineffective mess and does several things which guarantee the new wall
will fail like the old
one.
Why
Dry Stacked and Surface Bonded Walls Are 5 X Stronger
The
concept is very simple. Ordinary mortared walls are weak and have
mortar trowelled in between them to
level the courses. Many
mistakenly believe mortar to be glue. This however is simply not
true. A mortar joint is
called a cold joint. A cold joint is a very weak porosity only, bond.
Everyone knows that when new concrete is applied over old it doesn’t
bond, it doesn’t adhere, and it doesn’t stick.
Actually,
anyone who has ever seen a bowing basement wall will note the walls
can be cracked all over but still don’t give in. That is
because the downward pressure of the house exceeds the pressure
exerted from the soil.
The
concept behind a surface bonded super-wall is simple.
Just
imagine a wall made up of 8 a,b,c wooden kids blocks.
Stack
them up in your minds eye. Now just imagine that you apply pressure
evenly from the top.
The
more pressure you add the stronger the blocks get.
Next,
imagine
putting your hand on the top but only covering half
of it.
See
the blocks go shooting across the room.
You
See Even load distribution is EVERYTHING.
Now
Imagine those same abc wooden kids blocks were stacked up, but with
duct tape going up both sides of the blocks.
Now,
add imaginary pressure- that’s right; incredibly
strong! By applying a
surface bond you are in effect turning the whole stack into a bond
beam. Amazing!
In
real life, the first course is laid traditionally in a bed of mortar
to level the first course and the rest of the blocks are stacked on
top in staggered courses just like traditional masonry, called a
“running bond.” Once the walls have been completed up to
the last course, our superior process comes into play. At the top
course we cut the top blocks a 1/16 of an inch over the gap between
the sill plate and the next course. We then take a bottle jack and
lift just enough pressure to get the block in, in this fashion. This
is something that could not be done with mortar. We: move, cut,
lift, set. We: move, cut, lift, set.
We
finish the last course, and by the time we are done… voila!
Now the house is again resting its weight and transferring it
directly from the sill to the footer. Of course we always correct any
sill plate or FRAMING issues before
we begin the repair
What
makes our Re-build Technique Far Superior????
Everything!!
When other contractors
rebuild a wall, what is typically done is to jack and block support
the walls and remove the soil and knock out the walls.
Next they will
typically clean the footing and begin to re- lay new concrete block
course by course in beds of mortar right up to the existing sill
plate.
Next the mason will
jack the house an additional 3/8 to one half of an inch. The wall is
then shimmed along its length and the jacks are removed.
Finally the remaining
gap is tuck pointed at the top of the wall to fill the void between
sill and top block. Virtually every contractor inexistence who
re-builds walls uses this method of repair.
Problem is this method
is flat out bad!!
Why you ask????
The reason is related to
what we were discussing above regarding load distribution.
The masons re-building
the wall using the technique just described have inadvertently
changed the load distribution from evenly applied direct pressure to
point load distribution!!! This means the house load is really
resting on the shimmed points along the wall rather than on the top
block!!
With our unique Super
Bond Dry Stacking Technique this problem as well as many others are
eliminated allowing us to build a new wall with up to 5X the lateral
load capacity of a mortared block wall!!!
First we support the
foundation using a series of basement jacks.
Next the wall is
excavated and the old building units are removed.
As long as the footer is
sufficient , we then lay the first course in a bed of mortar without
any head joints between the blocks.
We can then begin to
stack up the rest of the blocks using a running bond pattern (this
means using offset or staggered courses).
We then proceed to lay
up the rest of the courses all of the way up to the top course. We
can then sight along the entire wall and using a rubber mallet
correct any blocks out of line and make the wall completely straight
prior to adding pressure or applying the surface bonding cement.
Now this is where our
process becomes far superior; we now use a bottle jack capable of
lifting 25 tons on the block in front of the space where we plan on
setting the first top course block.
Each and every block of
the top courses is cut individually a 1/16 of an inch Over the gap
between the sill plate and the Second course from the sill plate.
We then beat the block
in place and let the pressure of the house back down onto the wall.
We then move the bottle jack measure the gap and cut the block a 1/16
over the gap, install the block and continue in this fashion all the
way down the length of the wall; move cut lift set, move cut lift
set.
In this fashion it
becomes possible to set the weight of the house entirely back on to
the wall!!
We can remove the jacks
and supports and the house is now resting entirely onto the dry
stacked masonry units!!!!
There is a direct
transfer of load from sill through masonry to the footing. This is
essential to new wall strength. Unlike the mortared block wall
rebuild shimming is not required; no point load issues either!!
. Now once the entire
wall has been rebuilt, we then trowel a skim coat, a stucco like
slurry all over the outside and the inside of the wall. This slurry
has tens of thousands of “cat hair” fibers, which used to
be made of fiber-glass but today are made of super
strong nylon fibers.
This
process of mixing a fiber matrix into a cement mixture goes all
the way back to Egypt where
they mixed straw with mud before making bricks of them.
In
ancient Rome the Romans perfected the art of laying dry stacked
blocks without mortar and then covering it with layers of stucco
cement plaster.
In
more recent times, cement plasterers of the twentieth century used
horse-hair
in plaster
to strengthen it. Today’s nylon fibers are the modern
space age equivalent.
When
they are mixed into to a high-strength
water-proofed surface-bonding
cement,
which has a chemical bonding adhesive mixed in it, that makes it
chemically “glue” to the wall - the end result is a
super-bonded high-
strength bond-beam.
This
makes it incredibly tuff
and you get a real guarantee of piece of mind knowing your new wall
is now 5X stronger
against lateral or sideways loads!!!
Next in order to protect
that wall and make it impermeable to water it is essential that you
protect it with a “water-proofing” system.
When a
basement is re-built what the code minimums require is trowel a
mortar parge coat on the wall which is basically trowelling mortar
on the wall like stucco; then applying a damproof tar or asphalt
sealant.
This
basic technique has been used for the last 100 years.
Just
imagine all of the advances that have been made in the last hundred
years yet builders still seal the wall using this archaic process!
It is
Guaranteed to fail every time; in fact in Cleveland, Ohio alone there
are over 125 water-proofing companies in the yellow pages !!!
What
these “so-called water-proofers” do is dig up the
basement and actually RE-APPLY
the EXACT SAME
SEALANTS and utilize the
exact same techniques that
already FAILED
in the first place!
Does
that make any sense whatsoever???
This
usually means re-parging the wall with porous mortar and smearing
some tar on it like a monkey!
Have
you ever known anyone that had an asphalt driveway?
How
often did they Have-To
Re- Seal it?
I can
tell you I have, known many people with black top drives. When I was
a kid growing up two of my neighbors had an ongoing debate about
their driveways.
The
first neighbor swore you needed
to seal it every single year,
and he did.
The
second neighbor swore every
two years was enough.
I
can still hear them arguing now in my mind’s eye…
LOL.
The
sad truth is that according to the US Bureau of Standards asphalt
sealants begin to break down in only 18
months, YIKES!
You see
the sad truth is they were both right!
And
these so called water-proofers charge an average of ten to fifteen
grand just to dig up the basement and seal it again using what FAILED
already.
…You
See Tar Has Never
Been
Rated as Waterproof
When
I discovered this, it sent my head spinning!
You see
the reason why was, that every single “waterproofer” I
knew used tar (asphalt based sealants)!!
…You
See Tar Has Never
Been
Rated as Waterproof
When
I discovered this, it sent my head spinning!
You see
the reason why was, that every single “waterproofer” I
knew used tar (asphalt based sealants)!!
They
couldn’t ALL be wrong….
Or could they?????
Did
you know that in the building codes there are actually two separate
definitions for damp-proofing (tar)
and waterproofing.
Damp
proofing: by definition
means “something that helps to slow the penetration of water
into the substrate”.
HHMMM
“helps to slow”
sounds quite different
than the definition of:
Waterproofing:
“something that
prevents
the penetration of water” and
further must pass a bending test where the membrane must be able to
be bent around a cylinder.
Water
proof sealants are almost all exclusively used and installed
COMMERCIALLY…
(that’s
because they are more expensive).
The
extra costs are what stop the average contractor from offering you ,
the homeowner, a product that is effective and will last and “stand
the test of time”.
We
have developed a true SUPER
DRY™ MULTI-STEP EXTERIOR WATERPROOFING SYSTEM which,
uses a cement-based fiber re-enforced wall resurfacing system and NO
LESS than two
waterproof
rated sealants.
This
is by no means the cheapest of methods, however, and it
may or may not be the BEST
system to put into place. Which system you should use depends
entirely on the specific nature of YOUR problem. There are NO
miracle systems than can solve ALL basement problems.
The
thing I can guarantee is if our outside waterproof system is
installed it will actively drain water away from the foundation, and
the water leak will be a thing of the past,
not only that, but our sealants will outlast
the wood on your house
GUARANTEED!
I’d
like to tell you a story you’ve got to hear about a job I
recently did for a Mr. Ron Sewyak on state route 20 in Oberlin.
This is
a sad story about a man who had to have his basement fixed THREE
TIMES in ten short years!!!!!
Mr Sewyak had had the walls of
his home rebuilt ten years ago using conventional masonry techniques.
They were rebuilt using 12" blocks and type n mortar. A
conventional parge coat was applied and tar. New tiles and backfill
were added. This is what is considered “outside
waterp-proofing”.
Four years later the walls were
leaking again!!!
Exasperated the homeowner had Ohio State
Waterproofing install their inside outside "waterproofing
system" (inside) and they hoped their problems were over.
Again he
thought his problem was solved!
Sadly,
I met Ron a few months ago.
He asked me to come out to his
house because his basement walls were severely bowed bulging and
shifted off the first course and out of plumb.
I was able to
observe portions of the outside "waterproofing " system
from ten years ago and the inside/outside system from six years ago
both had fatal flaws but…. Neither system was the cause of the
problem.
After careful inspection I assessed the real
problem----BAD FRAMING!!!!
That’s right, it turned out
that the first contractor (who did many things poorly) built the
walls directly back up to and underneath the existing framing
deficiency which caused the
wall system to fail in the first place.
A partial sill plate
and a lack of cribbing on the gable end walls were behind their
basements problems from the beginning.
After the first winter
ten years ago, the newly re-built wall began to crack... this opened
water ways which made the walls leak.
Ron's second contractor
performed an inside system which, while done poorly, also stopped
active water puddles on the floor.
Unfortunately it did
nothing to stop the structural issues, which worsened and worsened,
until he was forced to call me.
So in a ten year period the
walls have been repaired three times!!!!
Can you
imagine???
Fortunately, for Ron I fixed them once and for all
by first correcting the framing issues and repairing the sill plate;
then performing a complete excavation.
Only once the earth was
removed completely; all the way down to the bottom of the footer, was
I able to push the walls back in line and use my surface bonding
structural repair solution. Then of course I applied three
sealants to the wall one damp-proof two of them waterproof.
Then
I replaced the drainage system with new thick wall pipe and stone all
the way to 12" of grade separated from the top soil with filter
fabric!!!!!
So why didn't I fix them from the
inside???
Because in his situation, it would not work; it was
not the source of the problem.
I always tell my customers all
of their options .
Then
I tell them what I would do if I was in their shoes.
Regardless
of your suppositions, not all homeowners can afford an outside
system.... worse... most outside contractors do not know how to
install a true WATER-PROOFING system.
So the poor homeowner is
left buying a repair that involves excavating the wall and using the
same techniques that FAILED ALREADY!!!
If you
are considering outside excavation and water-proofing you need to
learn what makes our system the BEST and why you would never ever
want any other technique to be attempted.
To
re-cap the typical outside waterproofing contractor first excavates
the wall then applies a basic mortar parge. Mortar is very porous,
it soaks up water like a sponge.
Some of
the old timers will apply a Portland cement and ironite coating. This
is Portland cement mixed with powdered iron ore filings. The idea is
that as the iron ore filings oxidize they will expand helping to stop
the absorption; while this is less porous than a plain mortar parge
the fact it still soaks up water like a sponge.
A better
newer cement base coating is called thoro-seal it is a capillary
blocked cement coating. While it is much better than an old fashioned
mortar parge.
It is
not however comparable to the first step in our Super Dry Multi- Step
system.
There
are several reasons for this; namely that ordinary mortar parges rely
on a porosity bond to adhere to the wall. This means it is a physical
bond that is locked only into the nooks and crannies of the block
face.
The
first coating that we apply to the wall is a waterproofed
below grade surface bonding cement. The
product was originally
developed to glue blocks together from the surface that had
absolutely no mortar in between them.
When
used as a parge coat we mix it with an acrylic bonding adhesive, this
gives it both porosity adhesion as well as a superior chemical
adhesion to the wall; which really means once we put it on it is
there to stay!
Next not
only is it non-porous like thoro-seal it also is capable of holding a
four foot head of water with out block penetration! That’s
amazing!
Not only
is it more waterproof and chemically bonded to the wall it is
reinforced with thousands and thousands of tiny cat hair length nylon
fibers which make it incredibly tuff and strong!!! The manufacturer
claims it is the only sealant required to keep the basement dry; why
do we apply two more coatings???? Well the simple answer is concrete
based sealants have a fatal flaw namely expansion and contraction of
the soil. You see concrete can always develop hairline cracks, which
is the reason we go over it twice!
Do you
remember the story in the Bible when the Israelites were in captivity
in Egypt?? They were forced to mixed straw fibers into the mud for
making bricks…. You see the basic concept of introducing a
fiber matrix into a masonry product to increase strength is very,
very old!!!!
The next
step that is done by most outside contractors is to spray or brush an
asphalt (tar) based seal on the wall…. Just like the story
from above about the two driveways, tar is not and never will be,
waterproof!!! There are a few polymer modified tars that last
slightly longer than basic tar but most are not rated for more than
60 months before they get hard set and crack!!!!
That’s
only 5 years!!! Crazy!!! They can be marketed under names like
Tuff-n-Dri and others but they are still inferior sealants.
These
guys then will cover the tar with either plastic sheeting or foam
board.
Plastic
sheeting is a big booby trap that will separate from the tar as it
hardens and then can trap water in between the wall and the plastic
creating a worse problem than before the so called repair!!! The foam
board will help to keep the tar from being scratched as it is being
back-filled but is not waterproof and can often attract fungal
growth between the foam and tar breaking the tar down even faster !!!
The
next coating in the Super
Dry Multi-Step System is to
apply either a vulcanized rubber or a flashing grade elasto-meric
acrylic latex resin. Both are derived from latex rubber and truly
deserve the moniker of Water Proof! Both were developed as an
improvement to tar based flat roofing applications where the tar
inevitably failed!!!!
The
final coating we use was developed for underground parking garages
and military bases, originally in Germany. A Canadian inventor then
improved the technology and ironed out the rest of the bugs with the
system so it would work permanently on regular houses. It is called
an air-gap drainage membrane/ blanket system. It is the best membrane
system ever developed in the authors opinion. There a many reasons
why, but here are a few: it is made of polyethylene plastic which is
terrible in our landfills because it does not break down but awesome
as a waterproofing blanket as it will outlast the wood on your house
guaranteed. It has no natural enemies other than sunlight and it is
buried so it will never see the sun. It traps an air gap or blanket
of air between the wall and the back fill dirt. It does this because
of the thousands of dimples impressed into the membrane when it is
being made. Even if the membrane is punctured it will not allow water
penetration because unless the water is pressurized
it cannot
jump across an air gap.
After
the wall is sealed the other aspects of our system are also superior
to our so-called competitors… including: We never use thin
wall pipe only the thicker walled rigid pipes- this is so we never
need to worry about chunks in the backfill crushing the pipes .
We
always leave a geo-textile fabric under the pipes before the bed of
stone being used to pitch the pipes, this prevents mud from clogging
them and silt from migrating into them from underneath.
We back
fill the wall all the way to within a few feet of grade with clean
stone--- this is to prevent the extra pressure from wet soil from
being added to the wall itself!
Stone
stacks on itself and drains, soil absorbs water weight!!
We
separate the soil we back fill over the stone from the stone using
the afore-mentioned geo-textile. This keeps the air gaps in the stone
intact and prevents the soils from rinsing down into the stone bed
and filling/clogging the drainage pipes!
We
always replace the downspout lines bedded in stone and never ever
fill soil under new driveways or concrete patio pads instead we use
layers of compacted premium fill in these areas, to prevent
settlement.
You
can now feel confident and get the assurance that your basement will
remain dry and can be re-modeled any way you like it!
Remember
you house is your biggest investment-
when you need basement help, call about a Super Dry Basement™
and:
Get
more for your money!
You’ll
get immediate service turnaround - most inspections performed in
24-48 Hours.
You’ll get the best basement
waterproofing in the Midwest serving Ohio, Michigan, Western
Pennsylvania and Northern Kentucky.
You’ll
get the best trained inspectors in the industry!
You’ll
get the most knowledgeable structural repair experts!
You’ll
get immediate installation when you need it in a crunch to close a
deal.
You’ll
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