Damage caused by water can creep up on you. You, the unsuspecting homeowner or renter, might just be surprised one day at a patch of fuzzy, gray stuff growing on the wall behind the toilet. Or you might be surprised to get allergies when you did not have allergies before. Mold can cause both structural damage as well as health damage, and prevention is the best step you can take to combat mold and water damage.
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Using Adequate Ventilation In The Loo Can Prevent Water Damage!
The bathroom has become a sanctuary of sorts. They are no longer the public bathhouses that our ancestors used. In fact, they have become more than just a room with a shower, sink, and a toilet. They have turned into a major determining factor in many homebuyers' pursuit for the perfect dwelling, and they have turned into a room for relaxation. After a long hard day of work, school, and handling the other responsibilities in your life, there is nothing like filling up the tub with some scented soap wash, turning on some calming music on your portable bathroom MP3 player, and soaking in a luxurious hot bath to soothe aches and pains away.
When homes and buildings were first being built, the rules and regulations were much more lax than they are now. Today, strict building regulations have to be met before a building or home is to be built. Even a simple addition will require a permit and an inspector to visit periodically to check that the addition is being built with all of the building codes in mind. As a result, the construction and layout of a bathroom must adhere to the rules set forth by the industry as well.
All bathrooms are required to have some form of ventilation. This ventilation can be in the form of a window or an exhaust fan. Both the window and exhaust fan will let out the moisture that has accumulated when you take a bath or a shower, but it is only as good as its purpose if you actually use it. You might notice that some apartment buildings no longer have two switches in their bathroom. Before, one switch was used to turn on the light, the other was for the exhaust fan. Because managers and owners of the complex found that there was still ample mold growth in the bathroom, they were led to one of two conclusions: The tenant hardly ever cleaned, the method of ventilation was not used, or both.
Either the window must be opened or the exhaust fan or both must be used whenever you are bathing or showering. Failure to allow the excess moisture to leave the bathroom will only result in water damage, mold damage, or both. When the room has moisture and is of the right temperature, all it takes is a tiny mold spore, which is present both indoors and out, to find the perfect place on your window sill, in the corner of the wall, or behind your cabinets to land and start growing.





