---
title: "Waterproofing Below-Grade Structures Complete Guide | AVANORTH | AVANORTH Construction | AVANORTH Construction"
meta:
  "og:description": "Complete guide to waterproofing below-grade structures: membrane systems, drainage, damp-proofing vs waterproofing, and critical installation details."
  "og:title": "Waterproofing Below-Grade Structures Complete Guide | AVANORTH | AVANORTH Construction"
  "twitter:description": "Complete guide to waterproofing below-grade structures: membrane systems, drainage, damp-proofing vs waterproofing, and critical installation details."
  "twitter:title": "Waterproofing Below-Grade Structures Complete Guide | AVANORTH | AVANORTH Construction"
  description: "Complete guide to waterproofing below-grade structures: membrane systems, drainage, damp-proofing vs waterproofing, and critical installation details."
---

**Construction Tips**·March 16, 2026·3 min read

# **Waterproofing Below-Grade Structures: A Complete Guide**

**AVANORTH Team**

AVANORTH Construction

![Waterproofing Below-Grade Structures: A Complete Guide](https://avanorth.ca/_ipx/q_50&amp;blur_3&amp;s_10x10/uploads/blog/1773128016621-01a633b3.webp)

Water infiltration causes more damage to buildings than any other single factor. Below-grade structures (basements, foundation walls, parking garages, tunnels) are surrounded by soil that holds and directs water against the structure. Without effective waterproofing, that water will find its way inside.

> **Key Distinction:** Damp-proofing and waterproofing are not the same thing. Damp-proofing resists moisture in the form of water vapour. Waterproofing resists water under hydrostatic pressure. Most residential basements need waterproofing, not just damp-proofing.

---

## Damp-Proofing vs Waterproofing

| Feature | Damp-Proofing | Waterproofing |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Resists vapour | Yes | Yes |
| Resists hydrostatic pressure | No | Yes |
| Bridges cracks | No | Yes |
| Typical material | Asphalt coating (spray/brush) | Membrane (sheet or liquid-applied) |
| Code requirement | Basic residential | High water table areas |
| Cost | Lower | Higher |

---

## Waterproofing Systems

### 1. Sheet Membrane Systems

Pre-manufactured membranes adhered to the foundation wall. Common types include self-adhering rubberized asphalt sheets and thermoplastic (TPO/PVC) membranes:

- Consistent thickness across the entire surface
- Factory-controlled quality
- Can bridge minor cracks (up to 1-2 mm)
- Require clean, dry, primed substrate for proper adhesion

### 2. Liquid-Applied Membranes

Spray or roller-applied coatings that cure to form a seamless membrane. Materials include polyurethane, rubberized asphalt, cementitious coatings, and hybrid polymers.

> **Advantage:** Liquid-applied membranes create a seamless, monolithic coating with no joints or seams. This makes them excellent for complex geometries, penetrations, and irregular surfaces where sheet membranes are difficult to apply.

### 3. Bentonite Clay Systems

Panels or sheets containing sodium bentonite clay sandwiched between geotextile fabrics. When bentonite contacts water, it swells to form a dense, impermeable barrier. These are self-healing: if the membrane is punctured, the swelling bentonite fills the hole.

### 4. Cementitious Waterproofing

Cement-based coatings applied to the positive (exterior) or negative (interior) side of the wall. Often used as a secondary barrier or for interior remediation when exterior access is not possible.

---

## Drainage: The Other Half

Waterproofing without drainage is incomplete. Proper drainage removes water before it builds pressure against the membrane:

1. **Drainage board:** Dimpled plastic sheet installed over the membrane to create an air gap and direct water downward
2. **Granular backfill:** Clean gravel or crushed stone (not fine soil) placed against the drainage board to allow free water flow
3. **Perimeter drain (weeping tile):** Perforated pipe at the base of the footing, wrapped in filter fabric, directing water to the storm sewer or sump pit
4. **Window well drains:** Connected to the perimeter drain system
5. **Sump pump:** Required where gravity drainage to storm sewer is not possible

| Drainage Component | Function | Common Failure Cause |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Drainage board | Relieves hydrostatic pressure | Crushed during backfill |
| Granular backfill | Allows free water movement | Using fine soil instead |
| Perimeter drain | Collects and redirects water | Clogging with silt over time |
| Sump pump | Pumps collected water away | Power failure, pump failure |

---

## Critical Details

- **Wall-footing joint:** The most vulnerable point. Membrane must extend over this joint and be sealed continuously.
- **Penetrations:** Every pipe, conduit, and anchor bolt through the wall is a potential leak point. Use compatible sealants and collars.
- **Concrete curing cracks:** Concrete shrinks as it cures. Expect minor cracking. The waterproofing system must bridge these cracks.
- **Backfill timing:** Do not backfill until the waterproofing is fully cured and the first-floor structure is in place to brace the walls.

> **AVANORTH Standard:** We specify full waterproofing (not just damp-proofing) for every below-grade structure. We use drainage board, clean granular backfill, and properly installed perimeter drains on every foundation. Water management starts at the footing and extends to the grading and lot drainage plan.

#waterproofing #foundation #below-grade

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