So I've spent some money on trying to get my garage sorted as an office.
It got to the point where I was ready to get insulation in, board and plaster. Recently with the weather being so bad and the rain coming down the area near the door has just started to leak drastically. Water is literally getting through and causing puddles.
https://imgur.com/gallery/Tkg2vSd
See three pictures there of the door and both sides of it. The other side of that door is our garden, which is at a higher level to the floor in the garage (less than 1ft). Running along the side of the garage are aco drains which I recently had fitted, to attempt to prevent this from happening, however, they're obviously not solving the problem completely.
When checking the door area and using a hose pipe on the door the water begins to come through the bottom of the wall under the door, I don't know if the water is coming through anywhere else, or just there. The amount of water on each side of the door is making me think under my door isn't the only problem.
My plan was to get a kango and see what it looks like under the door to see if I could find out exaclty where the water is coming through.
I really don't know what else to attempt, obviously can't continue the work until this is sorted.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
[deleted] t1_ir6w74p wrote
As long as the “garden” soil is higher than the garage floor is then you will have water leaks. It’s pretty clear the outside wall of the garage is not sealed at the wall/concrete slab joint. The fix will be tough. On the outside area around the wall dig down about a foot past the walk/slab joint. Use a waterproof membrane with waterproof cement to seal the wall/slab joint on the outside. Fill the the trench with gravel and grade the level of the trench so that the water will drain away from the garage. Any other way you can grade the level of the garden water drainage away from the garage area would be helpful as well. This will always be an issue since the area around the garage is higher than the level of the garage slab.