<div dir="ltr"><div>Hi,</div><div><br></div><div>I've had to research that once, so maybe I can add a little bit to the conversation.</div><div><br></div><div>First, you need to identify why your walls are wet. And how much. Assuming you're in the basement, and you're dealing with a brick wall:</div>
<div><br></div><div>- Is it on one side, gets worse when it rains? Is there a higher pressure/more flow in the middle/on the upper half? This may indicate that the nearby street isn't properly closed off towards your wall. Get the city to fix it. Good luck with that, maybe the owner of the building has more leverage than you.</div>
<div><br></div><div>- Is it seasonal and only certain walls/areas are affected? Then maybe there is some leaking canal? Year round? Maybe leaking water mains.</div><div><br></div><div>These are the cheap variants: you find whoever is to blame and have them fix it by stopping the supply of water. They'll most likely also be responsible for drying your wall, which will work like Joshua described. If that doesn't work out, the wall will dry on it's own over time, good ventilation provided.</div>
<div><br></div><div>- Is it year round, all external walls are affected, maybe some more than others: you may be below ground water levels or near the top of the ground water. There are two cases: water from the side or water from below. From the side is bad, as it's very expensive to fix (as in digging up the sidewalk, insulate the outer walls), and you usually need the city for it.</div>
<div><br></div><div>From below is just shitty because expensive, and if your building owner doesn't deem it necessary, you're shit out of luck. Also needs to be done professionally (as in, you need that expensive gear that no one has, and the decades worth of experience, not to mention the insurance) and the capillary action upward needs to be interrupted, either by completely cutting through the walls and bringing in a layer of insulation or by drilling holes in a certain way and filling them with some sort of polymer/wax/somesuch which will then spread through the bricks. Those are the only two methods I can remember otoh, but there may be more. They each come with different caveats and different price tags attached. It pays off to do a lot of research.</div>
<div><br></div><div>You'll probably soon see the need to shell out a few hundred bucks for a professional who will drill a few deep holes into your walls (to measure humidity), survey the site and then tell you where the problem really is.</div>
<div><br></div><div>Oh, and there's of course the case of normal, underground humidity when the walls are not well insulated from the ground - there is no real alternative to good ventilation here.</div><div><br></div>
<div>hth,</div><div>Philip</div></div>