O
osh
Please bear with me during this long post but I'm trying to supply as much detail as possible to get an accurate diagnosis.
My property is a three storey 1930 terraced house. I have a conservatory extension at the back of the house and there is a tiled manhole cover to allow access to the rear manhole below it.
A few years ago we began to experience a smell of sewage in the ground floor. It was intermittent but by process of elimination we worked out that it only came about when the upstairs toilets were flushed, usually after periods of inactivity in the drainage system. We thought it may be a crack in the main soil pipe but a CCTV inspection proved that the pipe was intact.
We raised the rear manhole and discovered that the previous owners had plumbed an extra drainage pipe from the kitchen into the rear chamber by knocking out a brick or two and running the drain pipe through the gap. They had not bothered to seal off the gap around this pipe and when a toilet was flushed, all the stagnant gas and air was being forced through this gap and entering the kitchen through the floorboards. There are large gaps in the floor under the kitchen floor units that allow a lot of draught from beneath the house to come up.
We remedied this by filling the gap with expanding foam. This sorted the problem out immediately and smell was no longer.
A few weeks ago the smell came back. It was only when my kitchen drains started popping that I realised I had a blockage. It turned out the rear chamber was completely blocked. A power flush cleared this easily but during the flush a large ball of expanding foam came out. The drain guy thought this had caused the blockage but I'm assuming that it came loose either from being wet or blasted away by the power flush. In any event, the sewage smell did not go away after the drains were cleared.
We lifted the rear manhole again, and there was still a fair amount of expanding foam in place. The gap was properly closed off with cement, the bottom manhole cover sealed and replaced. However there is still a constant terrible smell of sewage. There is no pattern to it, it can always be smelled. It is clearly coming into the kitchen from under the cabinets - no doubt through the gaps in the floorboards.
I have tried to consider all options as to where it originates from and nothing seems to add up. It is not just a whiff, but a strong and constant smell. I would appreciate any educated ideas.
My property is a three storey 1930 terraced house. I have a conservatory extension at the back of the house and there is a tiled manhole cover to allow access to the rear manhole below it.
A few years ago we began to experience a smell of sewage in the ground floor. It was intermittent but by process of elimination we worked out that it only came about when the upstairs toilets were flushed, usually after periods of inactivity in the drainage system. We thought it may be a crack in the main soil pipe but a CCTV inspection proved that the pipe was intact.
We raised the rear manhole and discovered that the previous owners had plumbed an extra drainage pipe from the kitchen into the rear chamber by knocking out a brick or two and running the drain pipe through the gap. They had not bothered to seal off the gap around this pipe and when a toilet was flushed, all the stagnant gas and air was being forced through this gap and entering the kitchen through the floorboards. There are large gaps in the floor under the kitchen floor units that allow a lot of draught from beneath the house to come up.
We remedied this by filling the gap with expanding foam. This sorted the problem out immediately and smell was no longer.
A few weeks ago the smell came back. It was only when my kitchen drains started popping that I realised I had a blockage. It turned out the rear chamber was completely blocked. A power flush cleared this easily but during the flush a large ball of expanding foam came out. The drain guy thought this had caused the blockage but I'm assuming that it came loose either from being wet or blasted away by the power flush. In any event, the sewage smell did not go away after the drains were cleared.
We lifted the rear manhole again, and there was still a fair amount of expanding foam in place. The gap was properly closed off with cement, the bottom manhole cover sealed and replaced. However there is still a constant terrible smell of sewage. There is no pattern to it, it can always be smelled. It is clearly coming into the kitchen from under the cabinets - no doubt through the gaps in the floorboards.
I have tried to consider all options as to where it originates from and nothing seems to add up. It is not just a whiff, but a strong and constant smell. I would appreciate any educated ideas.