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Townhouse Basement Flooding
Hi! I have a problem with my basement. It floods after extended and heavy rain maybe twice a year. The water comes in from a below ground basement window. The water actually pools in the window well and comes in around the seal of the window. Obviously the first thing to do would be replace the window and seal, but I would also like to eliminate the issue of the water getting into the window well in the first place. I got a well cover which helped a lot, but I've still had some water make it in after extremely heavy rains. I do have a sump pump and well but I've never heard the thing kick on so the issue doesn't seem to be groudwater rising up from below. The thing is, I really want to finish this basement but there is no way I can do that if it might flood at all.
Now I know the exterior grading is a big portion of the issue as well as the gutter setup. I live in a center unit townhouse and my backyard is a hill that slopes down to the house, so my backyard is often soggy and water frequently pools in the yard. I've investigated an exterior drain system but all of those pertain to a house where you can channel the water around the corner, which I can't do by being in a center unit townhouse.
The gutter setup is also the other issue. Of the 7 townhouse in my row, there are 3 downspouts total. One on each end unit and one right into my backyard. Which means a lot of the roof water is draining right into my backyard. The only way I can fix this is detaching my gutters from everyone else's, which might cause neighbor problems and the HOA probably won't like either.
So you can sort of see what the backyard setup is like, a picture is attached. I'm standing on the hill. The window well is behind the AC unit.
So ideally, I'd like some kind of exterior drain setup, so how do I go about diverting the water around the house? Any help or suggestions would be appreciated!
Comment on amricca's post
<a href="http://www.waterdamagelocal.com/p/basement_flooding.aspx">Basement Flooding</a>
To clean a <a href="http://www.waterdamagelocal.com/p/basement_flooding.aspx">Basement Flooding</a>, you'll need
to determine where the water is coming from and either plug it or shut it off, or do whatever it takes to stop it.
Cleaning up will do little good if more comes in to replace it.
Comment on katehudson's post
<a href="http://www.waterdamagelocal.com/p/basement_flooding.aspx">Basement Flooding</a>
To clean a <a href="http://www.waterdamagelocal.com/p/basement_flooding.aspx">Basement Flooding</a>, you'll need
to determine where the water is coming from and either plug it or shut it off, or do whatever it takes to stop it.
Cleaning up will do little good if more comes in to replace it.