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Originally Posted by Hemi-Cuda
So our basement bedroom flooded in the summer during one of those massive rainstorms, and I finally got a quote from the insurance company. The water came up from the floor in the corner of the bedroom, which leads me to believe there's some kind of issue with the foundation there, but per the adjuster the insurance will only cover fixing the actual damages, they don't do anything to remediate the cause. I am able to hire my own contractors and the insurance will pay them directly, so does anyone know of a restoration company that can actually diagnose and fix foundation issues? I don't mind paying more out of pocket than what the insurance will cover as long as the root cause is fixed and I don't have to worry about more flooding in the future
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I had a buddy with an issue like this. Patching basic cracks in the foundation isn't too bad. I think it was $1-2K out of pocket for my buddy and he had cracking issues in two separate corners of his basement.
However, to save on costs, we did spend an afternoon cutting down and ripping out trees + roots right beside the problem spot though. When the dude showed up, he didn't have to work around plants to reach the problematic spot and the dirt was basically as soft as loam.
Another thing to do is to ensure your rainspouts pipe away from your home. I myself had water enter the basement in one corner on multiple occasions during periods of rain. Before I called someone to check the weeping tile, I investigated and discovered the rainspouts were draining right on the side of the foundation in an area dripping back towards the house. It would become a pond that occasionally would get to several inches deep. Once the two spouts were down/added piping to have the water drain a few feet towards the downward section of the lawn, no water entered my basement on subsequent rain storms. I also spent two evenings by myself and dug up several trees that were right beside the foundation that were probably amplifying the issue.
I do think I need to get someone to check for and potentially help with mold remediation before spring/summer starts, both from some type of pinhole leaks in the piping over the last few years.