Jonm
Established Member
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With regard to your existing shed it may be a good idea to add gutters, too late to stop the rot but it may make the inside drier.
You have clearly worked out what is causing the problem. I would only add that for your new shed, gutters with downspouts are a good idea. Outfall preferably to a drain or to a soakaway or anywhere away from the base.Yes, It rotted because its on the concrete, sitting in a slight puddle. The pent roof dumps all the rain behind the shed and the concrete has a slight dip in that same area. Plus I didn't clear out the weeds behind it last year, so they did their work and found some rotted corners behind belongings stored along the back wall of the shed. wasn't till I moved these items for the first time in 2 years that I realised what had happened. It doesn't have a damp proof layer (unless you mean the paint?) and it was made of untreated wood.
@Bm101 has/had lots of things I don't have: 3 friends willing to help, surplus paving slabs, space to move the shed to (mine is 40 cm from the house behind), presumably he also had a few non-december days/weeks to dry it out and didn't need to use the shed during that time. Plus he wanted to keep his shed, whereas I only need mine to last till the summer - when I can build a new one.
If I tried to raise it up now I'd have to move everything in there, detach the floor completely and leave the shed suspended in the soon-to-be-frost.. presumably I'd then have to lay a few courses of brick in the cold/frost before replacing the shed. And I'd still have the shed next door to it thats developing similar issues and the fact that both together are too small/cold for what I want to do with my shed-space. On top of that (on the plus side) I'd have to buy a load of festool tools so that I could do everything in the front room for the next few months!
With regard to your existing shed it may be a good idea to add gutters, too late to stop the rot but it may make the inside drier.