Anonymous wrote:It doesn’t mean a house had “problems.” The building code requires that you have perimeter drains and unless the lot is sloped such that they can drain with gravity, you need a sump pump. A sump pump can also be there to handle an exterior drain below grade like at the bottom of basement entrance stairs.
A house in our area *without* a sump pump would be more unusual and you would need to look at why, probably a slope that lets the perimeter drains exit with gravity. But you’d want to look.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Potential buyes will already see that the home has an interior sump pump, which will reveal the basement has had water issues. Given that, seems like it would only help to indicate that things have been fortified with exterior work as well. Wouldn't highlight it in the listing, but I would include it in one of those handy "recent upgrade" sheets that tell you what has been done to the house by current owners.
This is the problem, people are really ignorant about this stuff.
It doesn’t mean a house had “problems.” The building code requires that you have perimeter drains and unless the lot is sloped such that they can drain with gravity, you need a sump pump. A sump pump can also be there to handle an exterior drain below grade like at the bottom of basement entrance stairs.
A house in our area *without* a sump pump would be more unusual and you would need to look at why, probably a slope that lets the perimeter drains exit with gravity. But you’d want to look.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Potential buyes will already see that the home has an interior sump pump, which will reveal the basement has had water issues. Given that, seems like it would only help to indicate that things have been fortified with exterior work as well. Wouldn't highlight it in the listing, but I would include it in one of those handy "recent upgrade" sheets that tell you what has been done to the house by current owners.
This doesn't make sense. In many areas literally every basement will take on water due to a low water table. It's not about ones house having "issues".
Thus if the basement is finished or semi-finished I would assume it has been waterproofed appropriately.
I'd only point out a French drain for an unfinished, dungeon basement so the buyers know they can finish it.
Anonymous wrote:Potential buyes will already see that the home has an interior sump pump, which will reveal the basement has had water issues. Given that, seems like it would only help to indicate that things have been fortified with exterior work as well. Wouldn't highlight it in the listing, but I would include it in one of those handy "recent upgrade" sheets that tell you what has been done to the house by current owners.
Anonymous wrote:Potential buyes will already see that the home has an interior sump pump, which will reveal the basement has had water issues. Given that, seems like it would only help to indicate that things have been fortified with exterior work as well. Wouldn't highlight it in the listing, but I would include it in one of those handy "recent upgrade" sheets that tell you what has been done to the house by current owners.