White paper · Ben Hickman
When to Appoint a Waterproofing Consultant. And What It Costs to Get It Wrong.
Every major commercial development with a basement faces the same moment: someone opens the specification and asks who is responsible for the waterproofing. The answer is unsatisfying more often than not.
Every major commercial development with a basement will eventually face the same moment: someone opens the specification and asks who is responsible for the waterproofing. More often than not, the answer is unsatisfying.
The architect has specified a system. The contractor has priced it. But nobody has independently verified that the specified system is right for the ground conditions, the structural form, the hydrostatic regime, or the programme. Nobody has written a performance specification that enables open tender. Nobody is positioned to hold the contractor accountable when the system goes in.
That gap. The waterproofing scope gap. Is where most basement defects originate. Not on site, not during installation. In the design process, weeks or months before a spade goes in the ground.
What Goes Wrong. And When
Basement waterproofing failure is not random. The same patterns appear across the disputes and defect investigations that CLW is appointed to resolve:
The system was right for the product catalogue, not the site. A contractor proposed a system they install regularly. The architect accepted it without independent review. The system was not designed for the groundwater conditions on that specific site.
The specification had no performance criteria. Without a performance specification, the contractor was free to substitute materials at procurement. What was installed was not what was designed. There is no contractual basis for holding the installer accountable.
The waterproofing was value-engineered. Under programme pressure, the quantity surveyor removed elements of the waterproofing package that looked like duplicated cost. They were not duplicated. They were the redundancy. Redundancy is how waterproofing manages the risk of a single point of failure.
Nobody reviewed the details. The waterproofing strategy was specified at Stage 3. Nobody reviewed the construction details at Stage 4. The penetrations were built without the specified seals. The drainage layer was installed upside down.
Each of these failures was preventable. Each would have been caught by an independent specialist reviewing the design at the right stage. Each resulted in remedial costs that substantially exceeded the cost of the review that was not commissioned.
The Right Engagement Window
CLW's influence is highest at RIBA Stage 2. Before the waterproofing system has been selected, before the contractor has built a programme around a particular approach, before the structural form has been finalised around a drainage strategy that turns out to be wrong.
At Stage 2, CLW can shape the fundamental waterproofing strategy: the approach to groundwater management, the structural drainage strategy, the relationship between waterproofing and structure, the decision between Type A, B, and C systems (or a combination). These decisions, made correctly at Stage 2, eliminate entire categories of downstream risk.
At Stage 3, CLW reviews and specifies. The system is being designed, not yet procured. Independent review at this stage identifies material issues. Incompatible systems, inadequate drainage, missing redundancy, problematic details. While the design can still be changed without cost or programme impact.
At Stage 4, CLW is reviewing what others have designed. Interventions are more limited and more expensive. Contractor redesign, specification reissue, and procurement delay are all possible consequences of catching a problem that should have been designed out at Stage 2.
At Stage 5, CLW is managing risk on site. QA on installation, inspection hold points, commissioning of drainage and water management systems, technical queries from the subcontractor. This is valuable. But it is not a substitute for getting the design right.
Post-completion, CLW provides expert witness services, defect diagnosis, and remedial specification. This is the most expensive stage at which to engage. By this point, the damage has been done.
What an Independent Appointment Actually Delivers
CLW's approach is built around three outcomes that developers and project managers understand in commercial terms:
The right design at the right cost. CLW calls this Goldilocks design. Not over-specified (which wastes procurement budget), not under-specified (which creates defect risk). The performance specification is calibrated to the actual conditions of the site, not to the product range of a particular supplier.
Competitive procurement. A performance specification written by an independent consultant enables open tender between qualified specialists. The developer is not locked into a single contractor's design. The project benefits from competitive pricing against a common specification. And CLW can evaluate those tenders against the specification they wrote.
Contractor accountability. When the subcontractor installs the waterproofing, CLW is on site to verify. The inspection regime, the hold points, the commissioning checks, the final sign-off, CLW provides these as an independent party with no commercial relationship with the installer. That independence is what makes the accountability meaningful.
The Building Safety Act Changes the Calculus
Prior to the Building Safety Act 2022, latent defect liability on commercial buildings ran for six years from the date of practical completion (or from the date of knowledge for latent defects). For developers with long-term hold strategies, that period was already a significant risk window.
The Building Safety Act extended the liability period for dwellings to 15 years and created new accountability obligations under the Building Safety Case framework for higher-risk buildings. For mixed-use developments with residential above commercial, the implications extend to the entire building envelope. Including the basement.
The Building Safety Case requires a documented trail showing that risks to the building have been adequately managed. Waterproofing is a structural envelope risk. A CLW appointment creates that documentation: the risk assessment, the design rationale, the performance specification, the installation record, and the commissioning report. That paper trail is not incidental to the CLW service. It is integral to it.
Independent, What It Actually Means
The word appears often in the CLW proposition. It is worth being precise about what it means in practice.
CLW has no approved contractor list. No preferred product relationships. No manufacturer partnerships. No volume incentives from installers. No warranty revenue.
When CLW specifies a waterproofing system, the only criterion is what is right for the building. When CLW evaluates a tender, the only criterion is how well the submission meets the performance specification. When CLW signs off on installation, the only criterion is whether the work was carried out in accordance with the design.
This is a different position from an architect who regularly uses the same waterproofing contractor, or a PM who has an ongoing relationship with a particular specialist. Neither of those relationships is improper. They reflect the normal operation of construction supply chains. But they are not independent.
Independence is expensive to maintain. It requires turning down commercial relationships that would simplify business development. CLW maintains that position because it is the only way to provide advice that clients can rely on without qualification.
What It Costs. And What It Is Worth
CLW appointments are typically structured as a percentage of the waterproofing subcontract value, or as a fixed fee for defined stages. For a major commercial basement, the CLW appointment will typically represent a small fraction of the waterproofing subcontract. And a still smaller fraction of the building contract value.
The remedial cost of a basement waterproofing failure depends on the nature and extent of the defect. Investigation, diagnosis, specification of remedial works, contractor mobilisation, strip-out, remediation, reinstatement, and associated professional fees can collectively represent a substantial sum on a major commercial scheme. Add to that the programme disruption, the tenant impact, the insurance implications, and the reputational cost to the developer and their professional team.
The cost of the CLW appointment that would have prevented the failure is typically dwarfed by the cost of the remediation that follows it.
Ask Waterproofing Wisdom
For developers, architects, and project managers at early design stage, the fastest way to pressure-test a scheme is to ask the Waterproofing Wisdom Agent. Put a basement layout, a fee proposal, or a ground investigation report to it, and it reasons from BS 8102:2022 to a clear, defensible view on the waterproofing risk and what to do about it.
It is built to be useful with partial information. You do not need the full waterproofing specification to start. If it surfaces significant risk, that is the moment to have a conversation with CLW.
CLW is the UK's leading independent structural waterproofing consultancy. Ben Hickman, Technical Director, contributed to the authorship of BS 8102:2022 and CIRIA C817 and acts as expert witness in major waterproofing disputes.
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Ben Hickman authored this paper and contributed to BS 8102:2022. Bring your project. We'll tell you what good looks like at your RIBA stage.
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