
How can we prevent damp in our home?
damp marks appear on the walls of the office in the corner. Would this have to do with the exterior wall or insulation problems? What will we need to do stop this from happening?
Damp or moisture on the face of your internal walls can be caused by several factors. It may be water ingress due to penetration; it may be rising damp, although the latter is incredibly rare and often misdiagnosed; or it could be condensation.
Your description, and the fact that this manifests when it's cold, suggests that the damp your experiencing is condensation. Condensation forms when warm, moist air inside the office hits a cold surface, such as an inadequately insulated wall, and water droplets form. Over time, this can soak into the wall, leading to damp patches. Corners of rooms are particularly vulnerable because they tend to be colder due to reduced air circulation.
Yes, insulating your walls may be the solution but before you start spending money and applying for grants, I think you should consider a few things. Is there a bathroom with shower, kitchen or other room that may generate high levels of moisture linked directly to the room? If so, ensure that the door remains closed to prevent moisture travelling into the office or other rooms.
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Often, we shower and leave the bathroom door open during or after, allowing moisture to migrate all over the house and affect fabric. Close all doors over a series of weeks and observe. Remember the room must be allowed to dry out first. If condensation continues, then you move to the next low-cost option.
Is there a vent in the room, like a hole in the wall? If yes, check that it is fully open to allow air flow. Often these are blocked or the shutter is closed. If no, consider installing a vent. It is important to note that often you will see a vent in the wall and there is black speckling (condensation) over it or around it. This is because a passive vent was simply not good enough to deal with the problem of moisture. Why? Well, that would take more investigation, but consider putting in a mechanical extract vent. When moisture builds up, this activates, pulling moisture out of the room. It's money out but is a small disruption and may be the solution.
In either scenario above, its important to ensure the room is adequately heated. There are many solutions, but a suitable one is key. Before carrying out any works I suggest you contact a chartered building surveyor who specialises in thermal upgrades.
Brigid Browne
is a chartered building surveyor and a member of the
Society of Chartered Surveyors Ireland
Do you have a query? Email
propertyquestions@irishtimes.com
This column is a readers' service. The content of the Property Clinic is provided for general information only. It is not intended as advice on which readers should rely. Professional or specialist advice should be obtained before persons take or refrain from any action on the basis of the content. The Irish Times and it contributors will not be liable for any loss or damage arising from reliance on any content

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Irish Times
21 hours ago
- Irish Times
Laura Kennedy: Welcome to Canberra winter where I am wearing thermal long johns like an old man in a Western
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Irish Times
5 days ago
- Irish Times
How to make the best of light and shade in your garden
Barely a week on from the summer solstice and we're already painfully past the annual peak of daylight length, a time of year that always causes me to catch my breath. Listen hard enough and you can almost hear the far-off grinding of gears, as nature switches its energies from vegetative growth to flowering, seed setting, and survival of the species. That decline in day length, initially barely perceptible, accelerates as the months pass. It continues until the darkest days of the winter solstice, shrinking the number of daylight hours from 17 to just seven and a half, at which point it upends itself and the complex process is reversed. But it's not just the seasonal waxing and waning of natural light levels that has such a dramatic effect on plant growth and health. As gardeners, we learn that important differences in the intensity and quality of light can also be influenced by a myriad of modifiers other than the dance of stars and planets. 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But crucially, those same light-loving species can still struggle in a sunny, south- or west-facing location when weather conditions result in a sun-starved, cloudier-than-average Irish summer. Pelargoniums will almost certainly give up the ghost in a shady spot. Photograph: Alamy/PA Understanding these subtle, ever fluctuating differences in the type of shade, or conversely lack of shade, is a challenge. It's one made more difficult by that popular gardening term 'shade loving', an umbrella description that suggests there's a one-size-fits-all solution when that's simply not the case. [ The best ferns for Irish gardens: Chelsea gold medallist Billy Alexander's best picks Opens in new window ] Many woodland species of plant, for example, have evolved to thrive in dappled shade along the edge of wooded areas. 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[ Six easy tips for making your garden planters last all summer in Ireland Opens in new window ] As trees, shrubs and hedging grow and mature, for example, they will inevitably transform what were once bright, open spaces into areas where light levels fluctuate hugely. This has consequences for any light-loving species planted in a garden's youth, which can subsequently find themselves in what have become shady conditions not to their liking. Consider the changing nature of shade cast by an evergreen hedge, both as it matures and as the sun traverses the sky. In early morning, that shade – a shadow cast by the angle and position of the sun, and which also lengthens and stretches as the hedge itself grows and matures – lies to the west of the hedge. By noon, to the north. But by evening it's to the east. The taller the hedge, the greater the extent of that same shadow, which is also at its most extended in early morning just after the sun rises, and then again in late evening as the sun starts to set. The nature of shade cast by an evergreen hedge changes both as the hedge grows and as the sun traverses the sky In a world where a plethora of gardening advice is freely available to us all on the internet, key regional variations in the quality of light can also be easily overlooked. Full sun in a cool Irish garden is in no way equivalent, for example, to full sun in a Texan garden, or even one in the drier, sunny corners of southwest England. Such is the very different quality and intensity of that sunlight that plants that might quickly shrivel to a crisp in those hotter, brighter climes will grow quite happily in a sunny spot here in Ireland, just so long as the soil remains cool and damp. [ How to keep your garden blooming all summer long Opens in new window ] Conversely, there are light-loving species – for example, zinnia or celosia – that can be grown easily in otherparts of Europe and the US, but struggle to flourish in an Irish garden, even when given the brightest, sunniest spot. Heat aside, we just can't reliably give them the consistent levels of intense sunlight they relish. Some light-loving species that can be grown easily in other parts of Europe and the US struggle to flourish in an Irish garden. Photograph: Alamy/PA The same goes for certain kinds of fruit and vegetables, including some slow-to-ripen varieties of beefsteak tomatoes; aubergine; peppers; kiwi; and melon. It's not only heat that these need to truly flourish, but also plenty of long, bright, sunny summer days, never guaranteed here in this northwesterly corner of Europe On the plus side are those many species that thrive in our temperate, maritime Irish climate, from shade-tolerant ornamentals such as hosta, primula, fatsia, foxgloves, aquilegia, tellima, hydrangea, and narcissus, to many kinds of edibles including rhubarb, lettuce, beetroot, salad leaves, brassicas, peas, currants and apple trees. Hosta, one of the many species that thrive in our temperate, maritime Irish climate. Photograph: Alamy/PA The lesson to be learned? Just like an artist or a photographer, becoming intimately acquainted with the ever-shifting quality, intensity and direction of light is key to the art of good gardening and part of the secret to unlocking the potential magic of our outdoor spaces. This week in the garden The larvae of certain species (examples include box caterpillar, carrot fly, gooseberry sawfly and cabbage white butterfly) can quickly cause a lot of damage to plants at this time of year, weakening or even killing them. A combination of measures such as netting and handpicking is the most planet-friendly approach but isn't always feasible. In the case of bad infestations, biological controls such as the naturally occurring Bacillus thuringiensis or nematodes such as Nemasys Natural Fruit and Veg Protection can be very effective (stockists include and ) Offer late summer-flowering perennials and tall-growing vegetables some sort of sturdy support to protect them against wind damage, bearing in mind the eventual size of the plants when mature. Dates for your diary Delgany and District Horticultural Society Rose Show - Saturday, June 28th, St Patrick's National School, Greystones, Co Wicklow. All entries very welcome. To submit an entry, please email by Thursday June 25th. Specialist Plant Fair Weekend, Mount Stewart Gardens, Co Down - Saturday June 27th and Sunday June 28th (10am-6pm).


Extra.ie
26-06-2025
- Extra.ie
'Worryingly' high temperatures across the Mediterranean - but will Ireland see the heat?
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