I want to put inexpensive carpet on the floor of a storage building that has a plywood floor resting directly on the beams. Water is somehow seeping into the plywood occasionally - it appears to be from below (there is no drip from above), but underneath the building is bone dry, and because of the construction of the floor it is not feasible to tear it up and determine the source. I'd like to just ignore the problem and put in the carpet anyway. Is there a barrier material that would be suitable to put under the carpeting?
(I'm looking for a seat-of-the-pants, stopgap kind of thing -- this is only meant to last 4, maybe 8 years at best, and needs to be fairly cheap. Yes, I know it's not the ideal solution ... I just need to prevent the carpet from mildewing, I don't care what happens to the plywood since eventually the floor will need to be fixed anyway.)
2007-09-03
09:52:22
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6 answers
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asked by
zilmag
7
in
Home & Garden
➔ Do It Yourself (DIY)
By the way, it doesn't form a puddle or anything - it just appears that the wood is damp in one spot after some, but not all, rains. It has been like this for an unknown length of time and the plywood does dry out and seems to be holding up ok
2007-09-03
09:54:38 ·
update #1