Home Decoration Ideas

Everything You Need to Decorate and Improve Your Home

17 April
0Comments

Remove Standing Water in Your Yard

The roof, gutters and downspouts remove water off your home, but where that run-off water goes is an equally important part of water management around your home.

Water that consistently remains on the surface of your yard after a heavy rain is known as standing or ponding water. If this happens regularly near the foundation of your home, the concern is that this water will work its way into your home. Ponding further out in the yard can become a mosquito magnet. Standing water is a home maintenance problem that needs to be solved.

Because of gravity, water always flows down hill. In a perfect world, every house would be built atop a hill so all water would roll away. In the real world, you should work on keeping all waste water a minimum of 10 feet away from the foundation your home and clear up reoccurring wet spots in the yard.

Read more…

01 October
0Comments

Filing an Insurance Claim for Basement Water Damage

Many people wonder Is basement waterproofing a good investment, and the answer is yes – but there are some times when waterproofing just simply is not enough and the basement becomes flooded. No matter what measures that the homeowner has taken, there are just some times that the home is susceptible to become flooded.

What happens when the basement becomes flooded? In most cases, the homeowner will have insurance for these situations. In the case that the home becomes flooded with water, the homeowner can file a claim with the insurance company that will allow the homeowner to have funding for the repairs, the clean up and even any renovations that must occur because of the flooding that has occurred in the basement.

At the time that the insurance claim is being filed the customer will have to provide the claim information to the insurance company, the policy of the insurance that covers the home and the information that leads up to the flooding occurring in the home. M Read more…

27 August
0Comments

A Water Protection System Keeps You Dry

Rain, ice, snow and condensation cause water problems that often show up inside your home. When you see interior water damage, the first thought turns to the roof – is it leaking? But the roof is only one part of a system designed to keep water from infiltrating your home.

The roof is really only the uppermost part of a water protection system that keeps you dry. These components work in tandem to repel or move water to the ground, and it only takes the failure of one of these parts to allow water inside your home. Meaning, your roof can be in perfect shape, but if the gutters are malfunctioning you will eventually see water leaks indoors.

Your home’s water protection system consists of:

Roof – shingles are like hundreds of well-placed umbrellas atop your home, keeping you dry and directing water toward the gutters, and a roof is only as good as its flashing. Click t

Read more…