Caring for a care home after a flood

When stormwater inundated a care home, we devised a low-carbon drying solution to return residences to normal.

The incident

Gittisham Hill House is a residential care home in rural Devon, supporting vulnerable elderly people. Heavy winter rain resulted in serious flooding, causing stormwater to surround several bungalows on site and trapping the residents inside.

At first, it didn’t appear that water had entered the buildings and staff believed they’d had a near-miss. However, over the following days, it became apparent that water had flowed through the air bricks and inundated the floor space, saturating the concrete slabs and suspended block and beam floors. The residents were moved out and we were called in.

– The project loss adjustor

Ongoing work

Once on-site, our team conscientiously packed and removed all personal possessions to ensure their safety during the drying process.

Richfords’ senior technician carried out damage limitation, removing saturated carpets and extracting water. A range of drying methods were put forward, including:

  • Refridgerant dehumidifiers
  • Air movers
  • Targetted injection drying with desiccant dehumidifiers
  • Trailer-mounted dehumidifiers

Targeted injection drying was given the go-ahead, as it provided the best balance of time, cost and lower CO2 production. We used injection drying to remove moisture within the suspended concrete block and beam floor and to extract moisture trapped in the underfloor void, avoiding a significant and costly building strip-out.

The Outcome

It took six weeks to dry the bungalows thoroughly. Due to the ‘keyhole’ nature of injection drying, very little reinstatement was required. Once the injection holes were filled and the carpets replaced, the residents moved home.

By opting for targeted drying, we avoided removal and replacment of the suspended floors, which would have added more than a month onto the recovery timeline and over £30,000 in additional claims costs. Moreover, by opting for a carbon-friendly drying method, the project saved an estimated 3.9 tonnes of CO2.

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