This is the most German renovation project I have seen lol "it is Sunday, so I cannot cut today" and also those welds look way better then I can do! Everything looks phenomenal.
Oh Jeez. Considerate or what. When here in the UK they say ‘an Englishman’s home is his castle’ what they really mean is that interfering with the racket of ongoing works is as welcome as kicking his dog up the backside or smacking his children. It is an unfortunate fact of life here, that many householders upgrading their properties treat the task as if it is sacrosanct. Nothing should interfere with our obsession with property. We can have 5 days a week of a tradesperson slicing block paving, then the entire weekend with the DIY continuing the job or something else - and don’t get me started on the cheap Chinese chainsaws etc. It’s an almost incessant drone in the background of suburban life in the UK. Go electric already! Take care.
In Germany, you have to take stuff like this seriously. Mowing the lawn on a sunday can cost you up to 5000 Euros, if your really want to press charges.
My dad's number one advice when buying/renting a house is to avoid houses that are positioned lower than the road, as water will always flow downward and it's only a matter of time until the rain gets hard enough so then the water will flow through your house.
I would say always consider the risk of flood. I grew up in a house that was built in a hilly area and the drive sloped up but it never flooded because any rain would just run down the hill past us.
I'm not really sure if that is realistic depending on where you're looking to buy. You could be drastically reducing the number of available houses for you to purchase. You're basically limiting yourself to a house built on a hill.
@@thomasquall8476 in the Caribbean we never have the floor at the same level as the ground outside. You ALWAYS have to step up to the ground floor. If we built like this house we would be flooded every time a tropical storm or hurricane passed closeby . . .
I strongly suggest that you get a bunch of sand bags and have them ready for the next major storm, your dam is only as good as the last storm, and the gentle slope will make it easier for the water the crest.
I think this is high enough now. But a few sand bags would be good indeed. I might also add a flood barrier that slots in at the front door. They are rebuilding our entire street this winter. I will see if the levels change at all.
@@MaxMakerChannel yeah, the grade is all wrong, they kept paving the street until your curb didn't exist anymore -- that curb is there to divert water.
@@MaxMakerChannel I think a permanent solution like this is great, having some flood barrier slots is optional, but nice to have. At the end we all know what happens when you don't have something proper and permanent like this - then the next flood comes while you are sleeping or when you are on holidays.
@@MaxMakerChannelGrew up in hurricane country and this is solid advice. The beauty of sand bags is that they’re portable and can be used to plug holes wherever they crop up. Landscape can change quickly during a flash flood. Downside of them is that you usually need a bunch.
I love how thorough you are with fixing the flooding issue, you not only made sure that the original ingress point was blocked, you beefed up all the other entry ways I would have called it a day at the dam
I had to. Water is the absolute worst. In Germany we have a concrete building. Then we put 15cm of insulation on the concrete and on top of that we do a floating concrete slab. That concrete slap is not connected to the walls. That gets rid of noise transfer and also contains floor heating pipes. The problem with flooding is that the water gets into the insulation and to get it out again you need to vacuum the floor for a month straight. Hoses every 3m and holes drilled in the floating slab. Costs about €5000,-.
@@MaxMakerChannel Wenn die NYM Kabel im Leerrohr voller Wasser stehen, kann es auch noch nach Monaten zu Korrosionsschäden kommen. Am besten nach 6 Monaten einen Funktionstest an jeder Steckdose und Klemmstelle machen. Es kann bspw. der PE durchkorrodieren, und die Schutzwirkung des FIs aufgehoben sein.
@@MaxMakerChannel I always thought German building codes where exhaustive, but this is amazing😅 I guess it's nice to have sound insulation from the earth😅 I'd imagine you'd already have this problem if it wasn't for the sump pump
Really great work, and not just on the anti-flooding measures, but everything. The driveway, the garbage cans. Just a blast to watch these videos and get ideas for my own house/yard. Keep up the great work!
Really interesting. Catching videos of the water flow during the storm really helps to understand the problem. I hope you can do another follow up where we see the flood defense in action.
Tip on mixing concrete - there is usually a required quantity of water per bag on the bag. I have poured a couple concrete projects around the house that uses 20-50 bags. I first go into the kitchen with a bucket and fill it with a measuring cup to the appropriate level. Then mark the bucket with a sharpie at the water level. Very easy, repeatable, consistent method.
Or to speed it up even more. If you are using the metric system, just use a scale and not a measuring cup. Put the bucket on a scale, zero out the scale (or just subtract the weight of the bucket). 1 ml of water = 1 gram 1 kg water = 1 litre Use the shower nozzle to fill up the water on the scale. And then do like the other commentator said, mark with a pen. To make it even faster in the future. Very fast way to measure water, if it’s half a litre or 10 litres or 100 litres.
I do this for our mop bucket and multipurpose spray! I figured out how much product to put in, marked with sharpie on the outside, then fill the rest with water every time.
Weighing the water works for inch/pound, too. In US (and I think the old UK/Imperial units too) the units are defined such that, FOR WATER, 1 fluid ounce (volume) = 1 ounce weight. So "a pint (16 fl oz) is a pound (16 oz wt) the world around". Other substances have different densities, so the exchange only really works with water. You could look up densities for different substances, or just do what the other commenter said and calibrate a bucket (same thing, really, but without the math).
It's the first time I really thought about securing my parents house from water in that way, I wasn't there in a long time, but we had an event like that many years ago. Good work as always and thanks for some ideas.
That's a good series of measures to help stop your flooding. Flowing water problems are different from where water rises all around the property, so it looks like you won't have to instal one-way flow controls in your drains, which is good !
Great job! I live in a small town called Lismore in Australia. Our floods last year peaked at 14.4 metres. Many people have decided to redesign their houses to be flood ready... not so much flood proof. Given the current climate situation I think videos and content like this is very important. Many thanks for sharing. Big ups from down under!
Yeah it went over some two storey houses! People have rebuilt their houses with materials that can be easily cleaned and dried. No gyprock! Wood, steel and rubber only. Emergency exists are pretty important, eg a mini deck outside a window where a boat can pick you up from. Many people were stuck in their roof cavities as the flood water rose... so now they have exists in the roof also. A few people just put a little boat in their backyard to be sure. Google Lismore flood if you want to see some photos, it was insane! @@MaxMakerChannel
You make things so straight forward and understandable. Great solutions to your water problems. And as always a stack of sand bags on the side is always a good idea. Subscribed and will be watching.
Great job, would love to have seen another rain episode to see the dam working. I admire how you get jobs done and have the ability to see the positive in all you do. That's a great skill in itself.
Well done, I wouldn't have thought of raising the entire walkway or putting a gutter inside but now I am. Are you going to post an small update on the driveway when it blooms next year? I'd really love to see it.
Will do for sure! It bloomed very early but it started at the front and then moved backwards over about 1 month. The lavender bloomed late in July. Next year must be much better. Its all covered now.
Great video, my only concern would be the edge of the steel dams. If anyone tripped and fell they would be very unforgiving. Perhaps a rubber/plastic rounded top on them? Maybe a thin pipe, cut so you can slide it on the top edge of the dam?
We have something called “rain gardens” here in the USA. If you still struggle with overflow, look at rain gardens placed in your yard to capture more. Good luck!
This is actually a good tip. You don't need huge dams, you only have to be higher than your surroundings. I am planning some dams in my garden as well (being located next to a small river) and this helps me a lot.
I very much enjoyed your creatively mitigating the "intrusive water❗" You remind me of my late Dad who was a "welder" who retired from the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard. Good job to you dear Sir & to your good friends❗
Great video! I had some flooding in my garage & home entrance way, so this has given me some ideas. Flood proofing existing homes will probably become a full time occupation in the future :)
Great video, the writing and editing were great. Impressed with your good cheer in the face of disaster, and the pragmatic solutions you constructed to manage the risks. Thanks for sharing, final fixes look great!
Great Idea, we never had this kind of issue with our house, because the windows are all at least 10cm above the ground. Just in case I used the garden in front of the house as a water barrier, by planting a hill of Roses, Blackberries and Rasberries. So even if ther will come some flood from the street, it will happily continue to flow down the street. As we have some interesting kind of rain in this part of northern lower saxony, which means either a little dribbling rain or very rarely flood rain like in your video, i think there is a need to prepare. Please do more like this Projects and post them and when you like to see a real garbage railway, i'll show you my project some time. Thanks a lot and best wishes to Lübeck and the river Wakenitz
Sorry you had that flood to deal with and yes good job it was only rain water. Also much respect to you for your positive attitude in tackling the problem - great job - well done!!! I wish you well for the future and a dry safe home.
I don‘t think it is so very random, before I was reading an article in my online paper with an interactive map that showed the possibility of floodings of every part of Switzerland - my house is semi-safe….
1:43 sorry to say that's a river level gauge board on the side of the street. So I'd be looking out for much worse floods than a little rainstorm when the stream bursts it banks. I am a hydrologist and I can tell you I would never buy a house if it had a board like that right next to it!
There is no threat once it went past the corner at the front. It can flow down into the river. Its all downhill from my property except for that little corner. Also there won´t ever be a worse flood than from a rain storm.
Really enjoyed your video Max. It is important to keep the water out permanently, as this effects the value and desirability of your house. You don't really want temporary things like sand bags or clip in flood barriers. I would love to hear how you get on at the next big flood.
Great video! I especially love that you show how to actually do the stuff. I learned a lot about paving and whatever. It certainly looks a lot more professional than what my father did when he paved some parts of the garden - and probably also holds up way better 🙈
I did a little bit of paving with my dad when I was 9 years old. Back then he couldn’t just google it or watch a TH-cam video. That was so much harder!
This must be one of the most well-made videos, and dams, that I’ve ever seen. I clicked on thinking I would only watch a minute and then skip to the end, but here I am 14:18 later 😂
I saw your garbage train a while ago and never really thought about it again. But I just today it got recommended to me again which led to me watching your most recent videos which were very good and I will now watch your back-catalogue.
Excellent work. Interesting to see how construction is done in Germany. All the steps and materials were very similar that I would do in the US. Only thing different that compactor will be beat up from so many rentals. And that 4"x4" pressure treated lumber will not be that straight and nice looking.
These sudden weather events are certainly increasing in frequency and severity, so you're right to get on this now and start mitigation measures wherever you can. That's a very elegant and practical solution to the problem and it looks like you've added extra in expectation that the next time it could be a little worse. I don't think most people would have had the rationality to study the flow dynamics while this was happening, but there's not much else a person can do until it's over. I'm sure this is going to protect your home for a good few years.
Sudden weather events are not increasing in frequency and severity, that is a myth pushed by the extremist climate-change lobby. There have always been flash heavy rainstorms
I agree....good video and great solutions.....just a bit surprised that he didn't apply any paint on the 2 long metal strips that were put into the ground in the garden
Awesome video. I will be building my home on a hill in the countryside side so I don’t have to worry about water, however it will be in the Forrest so I will have to keep the brush down not to have forest fires. :)
Hope you won't get so heavy rain that causes rivers to appear on your street. But if it does aby chances you upload a video of how well your upgrades are handling? :) I am having constant floods of my basement so I might use some of your ideas 😂
I experience my first tropical storm a few weeks ago. 5 inches of rain in a day. I only had to worry about the water running off my house because my house is several feet above street level.
@@TomsBackyardWorkshopyou have to have soakaways on your property. Any water that falls onto your property you are responsible for getting it into the ground. This is the rule in the UK. Drains in the road are only for rain that falls on the road. Sewers are only for wastewater, not rainwater.
When sparks happen when welding it means that the surface is too hot or your welder is too hot. It basically means air pockets form in the welding rod.
Flooding is the next worse thing after a fire imo. In some places in the UK now its that bad people can't easily get insurance for it. Glad you got yours sorted. One question. At the bottom of the window outside, would it be better to go a little deeper and then install either a drain or gravel to allow the water to drain away? :)
That was puzzling to us. We dug as deep as we could and we never found a bottom. It seems as if its just open ended which doesn’t make any sense. But there is probably a drainage pipe somewhere down there.
Would a clear plastic window well covering with a rubber gasket seal be more effective in keeping rain water out in the first place? Then have proper drainage around the well?
I love your videos of home improvement projects - please update us when it floods again! PS: The phrase is "WHAT it looks like" not "how it looks like" :)
Interesting that your basement window is not also an emergency exit. Seemed a little scary when you were under there worried about getting out! At least here in our county in the US we have to have an emergency exit window or a walk out door for basement emergencies.
We have a second staircase exit but that is much higher than the street. This window is totally unnecessary. I think it is only there if there was a fire, then the firemen could push or pull smoke through there. No quite sure.
@@MaxMakerChannel That's neat, here in the Netherlands you just have to pay for everything yourself and any choices you make to be able to live in the same house when you're older don't really add any value. Much better for the economy when stuff like that is subsidized!
Top tip. Buy a ups that can run the pumps, if you loose power in a weather event, you will loose the pumps as well. A ups or battery backup will help keep you out of strife
I have a small generator and the pumps are only plugged in instead of hard wired. So in case that happens I can easily connect them. However we never had power outages caused by weather. Our power lines are all submerged in the ground and they go around in a loop. Even if one line gets damaged by an excavator they can turn that side off and supply from the other side of the loop. Only takes about 1h. I also have a huge petrol pump from honda for that. All on wheels so it can be effortlessly setup.
Nice work on the outside. In Minnesota, we use clear plastic hoods for our basement windows to keep the snow out. We also put a 3"x4' board sideways so the any reptile or mouse can use it as a ladder to climb back out.
Excellent solution to a serious problem. ( I’m American of German descent). We Germans are good problem solvers. 👍. Smart thing installing the sump pump before this storm. I lived in Durlach, just outside of Karlsrhue, Germany. I miss Germany very much. ❤ Love from U.S.A.
I have a property on a river, and the river occasionally floods the banks. But this is a good thing for me, because I know where and how high it floods and can build accordingly. When you buy a house that is already built, you really don't know how the flood waters will react. Making sure you are high and dry is always a good idea, and check to make sure you have swales or ditches that divert all the water away from the house. If you are on a hill it is OK, as long as there is a way for the water to be diverted around the house. If your home is in the bottom of a bathtub, you will be in trouble one day, I'd move ASAP if I were you! Look at New Orleans...
@@MaxMakerChannel it’s the same idea. I added a tee and post dug about 4ft down to make a French drain, then 6” below the surface I cut through the wall. the “overflow” portion is really only used in heavy rain like a hurricane. It’s the same idea as the gutter, just instead of waiting for it to overflow I’m allowing it in.
2:44 I found a toat in a space like that. He was fullgrown and could never made his way out. Must have been there from the beginning when I rented the place. And grown up in there eating from the spiderwebs. I put a finer mesh under it to prevent that ever happening again.
This is a great solution to a situation that is 100% down to bad design and implementation by the original builders. As the water has somewhere to go all you need to do is deflect it around your property and what you did is unobtrusive and should work well.
Bravo, sir, good job on all of it. The only thing that I will add and it really is for a once in a 100 year storm, is to get an extra pump and long hose, to place in the front yard, to get rid of the water, hopefully before getting into the home.
I love all the updates at the end, it was the nice surprise I didn't expect. Also nice to see the progress in all the projects, like oh I remember that video, oh and that one too. Thank you for sharing
NIce build! One thing I noticed was the grate over the basement window. when you were cleaning it out, it got me thinking about a screen or maybe a grate with smaller holes. wouldn't want that pump in there getting clogged
You need a smaller cup on your torch so you can see better.. i would suggest a narrow 6 or 7. Just remember to increase the cfh on your tank for a narrow cup. You might want to increase your CFH overall because that hole you made was from oxidation. Check your lines
When we pulled up the original path we found pebbles as a underlayment. I think the very last bit of the brickwork, so just the path was made in a rush. There were large gaps and the rounded path didn’t fit at all. Probably the last thing that was finished at the house.
I love this video! Your solutions are smart, easy to impliment and look fantastic. Form and Function! Living in New Orleans LA (below sea level), I will be sharing with clients and friends. Thank you : )
Hello, I'm French, and in my home region of Sarthe we have our own cesspools. My 224-year-old house is equipped with two masonry wells that hold back the water coming down from the roofs. It's an old system, but it's very efficient because it requires no maintenance, no energy consumption, no mechanics and therefore never breaks down... I think the old-timers had a simpler and more efficient vision than we do, who complicate our lives with systems that are efficient but complicated to maintain and not very durable. You could install a well that retains and diffuses water in the ground slowly, or install an underground cistern that would provide free water for the garden at the same time. Personally, it's the only thing I'm going to add to the work of the elders, a tank to get free water in summer and feed the vegetable garden I'm currently cultivating :-) keep up the good work!
I installed such a system in my new workshop. Just made from plastic. We also have one in the back garden but obviously that doesn’t help with the water running down the hill.
Just discovered your channel, it increased how much i want to buy a house and customize it myself too ! I'm happy i've stumbled upon it and i'm happy that you seem to enjoy yourself upgrading your house ! I'll check your other videos because the trashcans rolling outside made me curious i have to admit
Fabulous work!!! Thanks for sharing. Oh, after sleeping on your water issue: you could also raise the patio area. A lot more expense, but should the rain ever become torrential for a week or so, you wouldn’t have a problem. Or, you could put a sump pump in the patio area and run the line to the street. Just a thought.
Parents had a large bi-level. 60% bsmt flood before reach sump pump. Carpet had to go! Had to pull off paneling find water entry. Cracks in driveway the culprit. Water weighs approx 60 lbs cubic ft. Saturated soil will put 10's of thousands lbs pressure on the porus concrete, causing hydrostatic pressure. To weight pressure add water force pressure. If your house doesn't leak yet, foundation walls may begin to bow, develop large cracks, or drive, sidewalk, patio become all sorts of troubled. But you're the right man for the job!
Great way to solve your water puzzle! And looks like it was always there. We have a municipal alley behind a property (in Chicago) and the paved alley is higher than our sidewalk next to our garage. When we have heavy rain all the water from the alley (it really becomes a stream) goes down our sidewalk towards our house and occasionally floods our basement (not too much but still a worry). Your video made me think I need to remove the small fence/door and put a brick step there to keep the water from flowing down onto our property...
Been subscribed for a while(following your new workshop build) and this video popped in my feed so I was watching it. At 13:18 I just realized you're the garbage can train guy too! Lol
This is the most German renovation project I have seen lol "it is Sunday, so I cannot cut today" and also those welds look way better then I can do! Everything looks phenomenal.
Thanks for watching!
in germany its actually illegal on most residential areas, nobody wants to get trouble with police on a sunday lol
Oh Jeez. Considerate or what. When here in the UK they say ‘an Englishman’s home is his castle’ what they really mean is that interfering with the racket of ongoing works is as welcome as kicking his dog up the backside or smacking his children. It is an unfortunate fact of life here, that many householders upgrading their properties treat the task as if it is sacrosanct. Nothing should interfere with our obsession with property. We can have 5 days a week of a tradesperson slicing block paving, then the entire weekend with the DIY continuing the job or something else - and don’t get me started on the cheap Chinese chainsaws etc. It’s an almost incessant drone in the background of suburban life in the UK. Go electric already! Take care.
Olso in norway
In Germany, you have to take stuff like this seriously. Mowing the lawn on a sunday can cost you up to 5000 Euros, if your really want to press charges.
My dad's number one advice when buying/renting a house is to avoid houses that are positioned lower than the road, as water will always flow downward and it's only a matter of time until the rain gets hard enough so then the water will flow through your house.
He is totally right. But our house isn’t that low. It could just flow around and to the lower side of the property where the trash train is.
I would say always consider the risk of flood. I grew up in a house that was built in a hilly area and the drive sloped up but it never flooded because any rain would just run down the hill past us.
That's a good advice... until the city decides to renew the road and raises it.
I'm not really sure if that is realistic depending on where you're looking to buy. You could be drastically reducing the number of available houses for you to purchase. You're basically limiting yourself to a house built on a hill.
@@thomasquall8476 in the Caribbean we never have the floor at the same level as the ground outside. You ALWAYS have to step up to the ground floor. If we built like this house we would be flooded every time a tropical storm or hurricane passed closeby . . .
There is nothing worse than flood water coming in to the house. Nice work and sympathetically done to match the area.
At least it was just rain water!
Sewerage.
Fire burning it down ?
I would say fire
Lava?
I don’t have a basement or a flood risk but loved watching this. Fascinating.
If you ever build one, don’t add a single opening or outdoor staircase.
shut up
I don't even have a house
If you buy a house close to a pretty river these extras are thrown in.
@@rodolfoo3015some of us might envy you..
Genius approach! I would have clumsily created a tripping hazard but your approach to a dam is much better thought out.
Events like get you thinking! This kept me occupied for 3 weeks.
A step would probably no be feasible due to accessibility reasons
Wow you are really smart and you have mad skills. I'm watching October 2024 after Hurricane Helene.
"Grinder and Paint make me the Welder I ain't." 😁😁
I strongly suggest that you get a bunch of sand bags and have them ready for the next major storm, your dam is only as good as the last storm, and the gentle slope will make it easier for the water the crest.
I think this is high enough now. But a few sand bags would be good indeed. I might also add a flood barrier that slots in at the front door. They are rebuilding our entire street this winter. I will see if the levels change at all.
@@MaxMakerChannel yeah, the grade is all wrong, they kept paving the street until your curb didn't exist anymore -- that curb is there to divert water.
@@MaxMakerChannel I think a permanent solution like this is great, having some flood barrier slots is optional, but nice to have. At the end we all know what happens when you don't have something proper and permanent like this - then the next flood comes while you are sleeping or when you are on holidays.
@@eformance I don't think this is because of repaving the street again and again. More like cars parking and driving over the curb all the time.
@@MaxMakerChannelGrew up in hurricane country and this is solid advice. The beauty of sand bags is that they’re portable and can be used to plug holes wherever they crop up. Landscape can change quickly during a flash flood. Downside of them is that you usually need a bunch.
I love how thorough you are with fixing the flooding issue, you not only made sure that the original ingress point was blocked, you beefed up all the other entry ways
I would have called it a day at the dam
I had to. Water is the absolute worst. In Germany we have a concrete building. Then we put 15cm of insulation on the concrete and on top of that we do a floating concrete slab. That concrete slap is not connected to the walls. That gets rid of noise transfer and also contains floor heating pipes. The problem with flooding is that the water gets into the insulation and to get it out again you need to vacuum the floor for a month straight. Hoses every 3m and holes drilled in the floating slab. Costs about €5000,-.
@@MaxMakerChannel Wenn die NYM Kabel im Leerrohr voller Wasser stehen, kann es auch noch nach Monaten zu Korrosionsschäden kommen. Am besten nach 6 Monaten einen Funktionstest an jeder Steckdose und Klemmstelle machen. Es kann bspw. der PE durchkorrodieren, und die Schutzwirkung des FIs aufgehoben sein.
@@MaxMakerChannel I always thought German building codes where exhaustive, but this is amazing😅
I guess it's nice to have sound insulation from the earth😅
I'd imagine you'd already have this problem if it wasn't for the sump pump
pls never stop making videos like this, cuz I love them
Thanks for watching! I have been posting for 8 years now. I will continue.
Really great work, and not just on the anti-flooding measures, but everything. The driveway, the garbage cans. Just a blast to watch these videos and get ideas for my own house/yard. Keep up the great work!
Thanks for watching!
Yeah the rubbish bin train was very fun. MVP for a backyard rollercoaster...
Really interesting. Catching videos of the water flow during the storm really helps to understand the problem. I hope you can do another follow up where we see the flood defense in action.
Yes I will do that! But the next heavy rain will be in summer.
That implies another flood like that hits them. I for one hope there won't be a follow up!
Tip on mixing concrete - there is usually a required quantity of water per bag on the bag. I have poured a couple concrete projects around the house that uses 20-50 bags. I first go into the kitchen with a bucket and fill it with a measuring cup to the appropriate level. Then mark the bucket with a sharpie at the water level. Very easy, repeatable, consistent method.
Very good idea! Its small things like that that speed up the process.
Or to speed it up even more.
If you are using the metric system, just use a scale and not a measuring cup.
Put the bucket on a scale, zero out the scale (or just subtract the weight of the bucket).
1 ml of water = 1 gram
1 kg water = 1 litre
Use the shower nozzle to fill up the water on the scale.
And then do like the other commentator said, mark with a pen. To make it even faster in the future.
Very fast way to measure water, if it’s half a litre or 10 litres or 100 litres.
I do this for our mop bucket and multipurpose spray! I figured out how much product to put in, marked with sharpie on the outside, then fill the rest with water every time.
Weighing the water works for inch/pound, too. In US (and I think the old UK/Imperial units too) the units are defined such that, FOR WATER, 1 fluid ounce (volume) = 1 ounce weight. So "a pint (16 fl oz) is a pound (16 oz wt) the world around". Other substances have different densities, so the exchange only really works with water. You could look up densities for different substances, or just do what the other commenter said and calibrate a bucket (same thing, really, but without the math).
Bro your demeanour when encountering this is admirable. I wish i could be as stoic
You would probably do the same in this situation. Its not like you can ignore flooding.
As always, your neighbours are lucky to have you. Well done!
They don’t know it : )
It's the first time I really thought about securing my parents house from water in that way, I wasn't there in a long time, but we had an event like that many years ago. Good work as always and thanks for some ideas.
Its fun as well and peace of mind.
The problem is that they made the base of your house to low. Normally a house is placed higher than street level to prevent something like this.
Normally!
Good advice. My mom advices never live straight west of where you work. You might be staring into the sun on your trips to and from home. 😊
Ive been waiting for the driveway update! looks FANTASTIC!!
That's a good series of measures to help stop your flooding. Flowing water problems are different from where water rises all around the property, so it looks like you won't have to instal one-way flow controls in your drains, which is good !
Great job!
I live in a small town called Lismore in Australia. Our floods last year peaked at 14.4 metres. Many people have decided to redesign their houses to be flood ready... not so much flood proof.
Given the current climate situation I think videos and content like this is very important.
Many thanks for sharing.
Big ups from down under!
Wow! That must be higher than most houses! What do they do to be flood ready?
Yeah it went over some two storey houses! People have rebuilt their houses with materials that can be easily cleaned and dried. No gyprock! Wood, steel and rubber only.
Emergency exists are pretty important, eg a mini deck outside a window where a boat can pick you up from.
Many people were stuck in their roof cavities as the flood water rose... so now they have exists in the roof also.
A few people just put a little boat in their backyard to be sure.
Google Lismore flood if you want to see some photos, it was insane!
@@MaxMakerChannel
You make things so straight forward and understandable. Great solutions to your water problems. And as always a stack of sand bags on the side is always a good idea. Subscribed and will be watching.
Thank you!
Great job, would love to have seen another rain episode to see the dam working. I admire how you get jobs done and have the ability to see the positive in all you do. That's a great skill in itself.
Well done, I wouldn't have thought of raising the entire walkway or putting a gutter inside but now I am. Are you going to post an small update on the driveway when it blooms next year? I'd really love to see it.
Will do for sure! It bloomed very early but it started at the front and then moved backwards over about 1 month. The lavender bloomed late in July. Next year must be much better. Its all covered now.
@@MaxMakerChannelI hi uuiu
und ein video beim nächsten regen :) @@MaxMakerChannel
Great video, my only concern would be the edge of the steel dams. If anyone tripped and fell they would be very unforgiving. Perhaps a rubber/plastic rounded top on them?
Maybe a thin pipe, cut so you can slide it on the top edge of the dam?
Maybe some rubber hose? Bouncy but small.
We have something called “rain gardens” here in the USA. If you still struggle with overflow, look at rain gardens placed in your yard to capture more. Good luck!
0:52 this scene looks like it was taken straight from a cutscene which would be in a game with some 4K quality. This shot is just so cool.
You have such a good attitude about it all… finding ways to fix the issues and the labor, there was not complaining, which I admire.
This is actually a good tip. You don't need huge dams, you only have to be higher than your surroundings. I am planning some dams in my garden as well (being located next to a small river) and this helps me a lot.
Good luck!
I very much enjoyed your creatively mitigating the "intrusive water❗" You remind me of my late Dad who was a "welder" who retired from the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard. Good job to you dear Sir & to your good friends❗
Great video! I had some flooding in my garage & home entrance way, so this has given me some ideas.
Flood proofing existing homes will probably become a full time occupation in the future :)
Fantastic work friend. The dam matches very well and almost not even noticeable unless you where looking
Great video, the writing and editing were great. Impressed with your good cheer in the face of disaster, and the pragmatic solutions you constructed to manage the risks. Thanks for sharing, final fixes look great!
This didn’t bother me very much. Luckily the damage was minor. We just had costs for the painter and the concrete drying process.
Great Idea, we never had this kind of issue with our house, because the windows are all at least 10cm above the ground. Just in case I used the garden in front of the house as a water barrier, by planting a hill of Roses, Blackberries and Rasberries. So even if ther will come some flood from the street, it will happily continue to flow down the street.
As we have some interesting kind of rain in this part of northern lower saxony, which means either a little dribbling rain or very rarely flood rain like in your video, i think there is a need to prepare.
Please do more like this Projects and post them and when you like to see a real garbage railway, i'll show you my project some time.
Thanks a lot and best wishes to Lübeck and the river Wakenitz
0:30 Putting some sand bags at the corner edge would had prevented getting the house been floaded by the water coming from the street.
Nice job. I had to run underground downspouts and regrade around my home to get rid of any potential flood water.
Thanks now I want a house just to build some anti flood systems like you did ! Super cool video btw !!
One day you will if you want to! (And get super lucky)
Sorry you had that flood to deal with and yes good job it was only rain water. Also much respect to you for your positive attitude in tackling the problem - great job - well done!!! I wish you well for the future and a dry safe home.
Thank you for your nice message!
Who else is here Bc of the algorithm rabbit hole?
I started from a video about Africa’s $5BN dam, to history about how Hoover dam was built now to this day
I don‘t think it is so very random, before I was reading an article in my online paper with an interactive map that showed the possibility of floodings of every part of Switzerland - my house is semi-safe….
Its called the systematic escalating annihilation ofnour base of life for the profits of a few.
I am
I prefer the rabbit holes, but the algorithm locks me into stuff I've already watched as if I am absent minded or something.
German DIY, very impressive, no cutting of corners (except of bricks, and then only with a precision drawn line!). Nice work
1:43 sorry to say that's a river level gauge board on the side of the street. So I'd be looking out for much worse floods than a little rainstorm when the stream bursts it banks. I am a hydrologist and I can tell you I would never buy a house if it had a board like that right next to it!
There is no threat once it went past the corner at the front. It can flow down into the river. Its all downhill from my property except for that little corner. Also there won´t ever be a worse flood than from a rain storm.
What a great video! A very practical solution to your problem and the task was carried out very well with no detail missed. Well done!
Well done! I'd like to see a follow-up video showing how well all your changes worked!
Really enjoyed your video Max.
It is important to keep the water out permanently, as this effects the value and desirability of your house.
You don't really want temporary things like sand bags or clip in flood barriers.
I would love to hear how you get on at the next big flood.
Great video! I especially love that you show how to actually do the stuff. I learned a lot about paving and whatever. It certainly looks a lot more professional than what my father did when he paved some parts of the garden - and probably also holds up way better 🙈
I did a little bit of paving with my dad when I was 9 years old. Back then he couldn’t just google it or watch a TH-cam video. That was so much harder!
This must be one of the most well-made videos, and dams, that I’ve ever seen. I clicked on thinking I would only watch a minute and then skip to the end, but here I am 14:18 later 😂
@@daniyaalnoor8731 thanks for watching!
Amazing attention to detail, what a brilliant job!
I saw your garbage train a while ago and never really thought about it again. But I just today it got recommended to me again which led to me watching your most recent videos which were very good and I will now watch your back-catalogue.
Thanks for watching! No idea why the algorithm does things, but I would say the quality of the videos is constant.
you are simply a wizard. can't wait to see the next video
Thanks for watching! Glad you find them interesting.
Excellent work. Interesting to see how construction is done in Germany. All the steps and materials were very similar that I would do in the US. Only thing different that compactor will be beat up from so many rentals. And that 4"x4" pressure treated lumber will not be that straight and nice looking.
These sudden weather events are certainly increasing in frequency and severity, so you're right to get on this now and start mitigation measures wherever you can. That's a very elegant and practical solution to the problem and it looks like you've added extra in expectation that the next time it could be a little worse. I don't think most people would have had the rationality to study the flow dynamics while this was happening, but there's not much else a person can do until it's over. I'm sure this is going to protect your home for a good few years.
Sudden weather events are not increasing in frequency and severity, that is a myth pushed by the extremist climate-change lobby. There have always been flash heavy rainstorms
Good work. For some reason I liked your last step the best with the rain gutter to your sump pump. Also that trash train was cool lol.
Thansk for watchin!
I love your attention to detail with not only the functionality but the aesthetics too. Awesome stuff :))
Thanks for watching!
I agree....good video and great solutions.....just a bit surprised that he didn't apply any paint on the 2 long metal strips that were put into the ground in the garden
Awesome video. I will be building my home on a hill in the countryside side so I don’t have to worry about water, however it will be in the Forrest so I will have to keep the brush down not to have forest fires. :)
Hope you won't get so heavy rain that causes rivers to appear on your street. But if it does aby chances you upload a video of how well your upgrades are handling? :)
I am having constant floods of my basement so I might use some of your ideas 😂
Sure, I want to know myself!
Something simple turns into a huge project. Great work with great results.
I experience my first tropical storm a few weeks ago. 5 inches of rain in a day. I only had to worry about the water running off my house because my house is several feet above street level.
Thats how it should be done! But we aren’t even allowed to drain any water onto the street.
@@MaxMakerChannel Where do you drain the water to then?
@@TomsBackyardWorkshopyou have to have soakaways on your property. Any water that falls onto your property you are responsible for getting it into the ground. This is the rule in the UK. Drains in the road are only for rain that falls on the road. Sewers are only for wastewater, not rainwater.
Great fix! Scary when things start to flood and there is nothing you can do.
Not much in that moment. Thats why I like to prepare.
Amazing, but i'm kind of confused about the building, it may be my American showing but is the house one unit or several?
Oh there are 3 levels with 3 apartments. One is for my wife and I one for family and one for a tenant. We are privileged with that living situation.
When sparks happen when welding it means that the surface is too hot or your welder is too hot. It basically means air pockets form in the welding rod.
Flooding is the next worse thing after a fire imo. In some places in the UK now its that bad people can't easily get insurance for it. Glad you got yours sorted.
One question. At the bottom of the window outside, would it be better to go a little deeper and then install either a drain or gravel to allow the water to drain away? :)
That was puzzling to us. We dug as deep as we could and we never found a bottom. It seems as if its just open ended which doesn’t make any sense. But there is probably a drainage pipe somewhere down there.
Would a clear plastic window well covering with a rubber gasket seal be more effective in keeping rain water out in the first place? Then have proper drainage around the well?
Nice! Responding to calamity productively.
I love your videos of home improvement projects - please update us when it floods again!
PS: The phrase is "WHAT it looks like" not "how it looks like" :)
I would be pleased to see a quick follow up for your next flood. :) Nothing is more satisfying then seeing it work in practice.
Interesting that your basement window is not also an emergency exit. Seemed a little scary when you were under there worried about getting out! At least here in our county in the US we have to have an emergency exit window or a walk out door for basement emergencies.
We have a second staircase exit but that is much higher than the street. This window is totally unnecessary. I think it is only there if there was a fire, then the firemen could push or pull smoke through there. No quite sure.
Amazing and creative job on fixing all those problems.
The steel will rust, should have painted it or bought feuerverzinkt.
He said that was the point: "eventually it will also turn red and match the bricks".
@@haphazard1342Oops I have no idea how I missed it. Gotta watch again I guess 😂
Thats part of the plan. The alternative is grey concrete. But 10mm thick should last a while.
So cool, total mess this flooding. And instaed of whining and complaining this positive tone and constructive attitude with solutions ❤ Love it!
"A grinder and paint makes me the welder i ain't"
Genius! My first watch here…but with that standard of creativity & engineering, not my last!
You have an elevator in your house??
Yes. Its part of future proofing for the elderly. You get a government bonus for building it that way. Not standard by any means.
@@MaxMakerChannel That's neat, here in the Netherlands you just have to pay for everything yourself and any choices you make to be able to live in the same house when you're older don't really add any value. Much better for the economy when stuff like that is subsidized!
For the pump under the window, keep an eye out to make sure water doesn’t overflow it before it goes through the pump system. Great job 👍🏾👍🏾!!
I don’t quite understand. 🤔
Top tip. Buy a ups that can run the pumps, if you loose power in a weather event, you will loose the pumps as well. A ups or battery backup will help keep you out of strife
I have a small generator and the pumps are only plugged in instead of hard wired. So in case that happens I can easily connect them. However we never had power outages caused by weather. Our power lines are all submerged in the ground and they go around in a loop. Even if one line gets damaged by an excavator they can turn that side off and supply from the other side of the loop. Only takes about 1h.
I also have a huge petrol pump from honda for that. All on wheels so it can be effortlessly setup.
Nice work on the outside. In Minnesota, we use clear plastic hoods for our basement windows to keep the snow out. We also put a 3"x4' board sideways so the any reptile or mouse can use it as a ladder to climb back out.
Good idea!
Excellent solution to a serious problem. ( I’m American of German descent). We Germans are good problem solvers. 👍. Smart thing installing the sump pump before this storm. I lived in Durlach, just outside of Karlsrhue, Germany. I miss Germany very much. ❤ Love from U.S.A.
I have a property on a river, and the river occasionally floods the banks. But this is a good thing for me, because I know where and how high it floods and can build accordingly. When you buy a house that is already built, you really don't know how the flood waters will react. Making sure you are high and dry is always a good idea, and check to make sure you have swales or ditches that divert all the water away from the house. If you are on a hill it is OK, as long as there is a way for the water to be diverted around the house. If your home is in the bottom of a bathtub, you will be in trouble one day, I'd move ASAP if I were you! Look at New Orleans...
In this case we built the house ourselves. So far the rain never reached this level in 11 years. So we were surprised by the flood.
I had a window that did that in hard rain. I installed a bell drain in the well and piped it to the sump.
Very cool! Bell drains are fiddly aren’t they?
@@MaxMakerChannel it’s the same idea. I added a tee and post dug about 4ft down to make a French drain, then 6” below the surface I cut through the wall. the “overflow” portion is really only used in heavy rain like a hurricane. It’s the same idea as the gutter, just instead of waiting for it to overflow I’m allowing it in.
2:44 I found a toat in a space like that. He was fullgrown and could never made his way out. Must have been there from the beginning when I rented the place. And grown up in there eating from the spiderwebs. I put a finer mesh under it to prevent that ever happening again.
Oh poor toat.
So glad I watched this to the end and got to see your trash & recycling bins in action....that is really cool :)
I’d love to see a video during the next rainstorm. Really enjoyed your innovations.
This is a great solution to a situation that is 100% down to bad design and implementation by the original builders. As the water has somewhere to go all you need to do is deflect it around your property and what you did is unobtrusive and should work well.
Bravo, sir, good job on all of it. The only thing that I will add and it really is for a once in a 100 year storm, is to get an extra pump and long hose, to place in the front yard, to get rid of the water, hopefully before getting into the home.
I love all the updates at the end, it was the nice surprise I didn't expect. Also nice to see the progress in all the projects, like oh I remember that video, oh and that one too. Thank you for sharing
Thanks for watching!
NIce build! One thing I noticed was the grate over the basement window. when you were cleaning it out, it got me thinking about a screen or maybe a grate with smaller holes. wouldn't want that pump in there getting clogged
I really enjoy your pragmatic approach to issues. Great work!
You need a smaller cup on your torch so you can see better.. i would suggest a narrow 6 or 7. Just remember to increase the cfh on your tank for a narrow cup. You might want to increase your CFH overall because that hole you made was from oxidation. Check your lines
Love the mitigation techniques you used, simple straight forward and effective
Well done Max, it looks really natural, like it was by design.
When we pulled up the original path we found pebbles as a underlayment. I think the very last bit of the brickwork, so just the path was made in a rush. There were large gaps and the rounded path didn’t fit at all. Probably the last thing that was finished at the house.
I love this video! Your solutions are smart, easy to impliment and look fantastic. Form and Function! Living in New Orleans LA (below sea level), I will be sharing with clients and friends. Thank you : )
Nice!
I'm not a builder. Have no issues with flooding. Yet watched this video transfixed from start to finish for some reason ! 😬👍
I just noticed when he says subscribe the subscribe button lights up THAT IS SO AWESOME!!
Love this guy's cheerful and can-do attitude !
Thats me : )
Hello,
I'm French, and in my home region of Sarthe we have our own cesspools. My 224-year-old house is equipped with two masonry wells that hold back the water coming down from the roofs. It's an old system, but it's very efficient because it requires no maintenance, no energy consumption, no mechanics and therefore never breaks down... I think the old-timers had a simpler and more efficient vision than we do, who complicate our lives with systems that are efficient but complicated to maintain and not very durable. You could install a well that retains and diffuses water in the ground slowly, or install an underground cistern that would provide free water for the garden at the same time. Personally, it's the only thing I'm going to add to the work of the elders, a tank to get free water in summer and feed the vegetable garden I'm currently cultivating :-) keep up the good work!
I installed such a system in my new workshop. Just made from plastic. We also have one in the back garden but obviously that doesn’t help with the water running down the hill.
I LOVE seeing the videos on how you improve your house, these are really fun to watch. Nice work.
Next up I am building a large industrial workshop.
Just discovered your channel, it increased how much i want to buy a house and customize it myself too ! I'm happy i've stumbled upon it and i'm happy that you seem to enjoy yourself upgrading your house !
I'll check your other videos because the trashcans rolling outside made me curious i have to admit
Thanks for watching!
Seeing the weather forecast for today this sounds like a great investment.
Its going to rain a lot, but over many hours. The danger is only when a ton of rain comes down in a few minutes.
@@MaxMakerChannelGreat then! However it probably wasn‘t the last time 😅
Frohes norddeutsches Grillwetter 🤞
though you said that it wasn‘t a problem the last 12 years either
@@siteking4289 These rains happen more frequently now.
Can't wait to see an update from the next big storm
Will post for sure!
I like how you plan a plan A, a plan B, a plan C and a plan D. You don’t want to leave nothing to chance when it comes to water damage.
Fabulous work!!! Thanks for sharing. Oh, after sleeping on your water issue: you could also raise the patio area. A lot more expense, but should the rain ever become torrential for a week or so, you wouldn’t have a problem. Or, you could put a sump pump in the patio area and run the line to the street. Just a thought.
Thanks for watching!
Parents had a large bi-level. 60% bsmt flood before reach sump pump. Carpet had to go! Had to pull off paneling find water entry.
Cracks in driveway the culprit. Water weighs approx 60 lbs cubic ft. Saturated soil will put 10's of thousands lbs pressure on the porus concrete, causing hydrostatic pressure. To weight pressure add water force pressure. If your house doesn't leak yet, foundation walls may begin to bow, develop large cracks, or drive, sidewalk, patio become all sorts of troubled.
But you're the right man for the job!
Great way to solve your water puzzle! And looks like it was always there. We have a municipal alley behind a property (in Chicago) and the paved alley is higher than our sidewalk next to our garage. When we have heavy rain all the water from the alley (it really becomes a stream) goes down our sidewalk towards our house and occasionally floods our basement (not too much but still a worry). Your video made me think I need to remove the small fence/door and put a brick step there to keep the water from flowing down onto our property...
Sounds similar. I was thinking about a step. That would have been easier, but we wanted to keep the ramp so you can wheel things inside.
Been subscribed for a while(following your new workshop build) and this video popped in my feed so I was watching it. At 13:18 I just realized you're the garbage can train guy too! Lol