A leaking wall is rarely just a paint problem. The moisture is coming from somewhere — failed DPC, cracked render, missing flashing or lateral seepage — and until you identify the path, the fix won’t hold.

Fixing a Leaking Wall — practical guidance from the team running waterproofing work on the Garden Route. If you’re dealing with how to fix a leaking wall, this is how we think about it and how we actually run the job.

Where the water is actually getting in

If you’ve landed here you’re probably weighing up how to fix a leaking wall for a project on the Garden Route. We’ll cut the fluff: this piece is written by the team at TSCPM and reflects how we actually run work in and around George, Wilderness, Sedgefield and Knysna.

The Garden Route is a specific place to build. Coastal salt, Outeniqua winter rain, high water tables in low-lying erven and a seasonal tourism economy all shape how we price, programme and sequence a job. Generic advice written for Gauteng doesn’t hold up here.

System choice: torch-on, liquid, cementitious

Material choice is where most Garden Route jobs get decided. The wrong spec costs you twice — once up front, and again when it fails in year three.

For how to fix a leaking wall we typically weigh three things: how the material handles coastal exposure, what the SANS 10400 deemed-to-satisfy rules allow without extra rational design, and how long the supplier’s actual warranty lasts once you read the exclusions. The glossy brochure and the signed warranty document are usually two different animals.

We keep a short list of systems we’ll actually put our name against. If a product isn’t on that list it’s because we’ve seen it fail, or the supplier ghosts on warranty claims.

How a proper waterproofing job runs

Every build we run goes through the same phases, whether it’s a bathroom refurb or a full commercial fitout. It’s the only way to keep cost, programme and quality under one set of eyes.

  1. Brief and feasibility. We sit with you, walk the site, pull the SG diagram and zoning, and give you a range before any drawings exist.
  2. Design and approvals. Architect, engineer, NHBRC where residential applies, and council plans. We run interference with the municipality so you don’t.
  3. Procurement. Priced BOQ, supplier lock-ins, long-lead items ordered early. No "we’ll sort it on site".
  4. Build. Weekly site meeting, photo report, variation register, and a cash-flow curve you can see against.
  5. Handover. Snag list, compliance certificates (electrical, gas, plumbing COC), warranties and an O&M pack.

What it costs and how warranties work

Costs on the Garden Route sit slightly under Cape Town Metro and slightly over Gauteng benchmark rates. StatsSA completion data puts standard residential work in the Western Cape at roughly R6,600 to R8,900 per square metre, but that’s a completed-building number — it’s not what you’ll price a loose scope at.

For how to fix a leaking wall specifically, the variables that move the number are access, substrate condition, programme pressure and how much temporary works the job carries. We price everything in a priced BOQ against SABS 1200 payment items where the work is civil, and against a JBCC or PBA structure where it’s building. That way you know exactly what a variation will cost before you sign it off.

Anyone quoting you a flat lump with no BOQ and no breakdown is either new to the industry or planning to make their margin on variations later. Walk.

SANS 10400-L and the guarantee you should demand

Compliance on a South African build isn’t optional and it’s not paperwork theatre. The parts that matter on almost every job:

We handle the whole compliance pack as part of the contract. It’s built into the prelims, not a surprise line item later.

Signs the last contractor cut corners

Things we see when clients call us in to rescue a job someone else started:

Any one of those is a conversation. Two or more and you’re looking at a problem that will cost more to fix than the job would have cost done right the first time.

Frequently asked questions

Is there a maintenance requirement after the job?

Annual visual inspection, keep drains clear, check detail work after heavy storms. We offer a maintenance contract on larger commercial roofs.

What guarantee should come with the job?

Manufacturer material warranty (10–20 years depending on system) plus a separate contractor workmanship guarantee of 5 to 10 years on a properly specified system. Read the exclusions — most failures sit in the detail work at upstands and penetrations, not the flat field.

How do I know if I need a new system or just a repair?

If the membrane is blistering, delaminating or has multiple patch repairs already, it’s time to replace. If it’s localised to one detail or penetration, we can usually repair. We inspect and tell you honestly.

What system is best for a flat concrete roof?

Torch-on bituminous membrane with a cap sheet is the workhorse for good reason — it’s forgiving, repairable, and 20+ years of field data back it up. Liquid-applied systems have their place but detail work matters more.

How do I get a quote from TSCPM?

Easiest route is to contact us directly with the brief, site address and any existing drawings. We’ll walk the site, give you a realistic range, and only commit to a fixed price once we’ve seen enough to price it properly.

Get a proper scope and price.

Waterproofing work on the Garden Route, priced against JBCC, PBA or NEC4 short-form, and run by people who still answer the phone after handover.