Basement Waterproofing · Pre-Conversion
Basement Conversion
Waterproofing
in Maryland
Waterproofing first. Drywall second. The order matters — and OBW handles the waterproofing phase so your finished basement stays finished
Perimeter drain tile. OBW Artery crack repair. Zoeller sump pump. Vapor barrier where applicable. Documentation package for your finish contractor. Lifetime transferable guarantee.
The Step That Has to Come First
What OBW Does in a
Basement Conversion Project
OBW's role in a basement conversion is specific: we handle the waterproofing phase. Perimeter drain tile at the footer, crack repair, sump pump installation, and vapor barrier where indicated. We do not frame, insulate, hang drywall, or perform finish carpentry. Our scope ends with a dry, sealed basement ready for the finish contractor.
We handle the waterproofing phase first because finishing a damp basement creates a mold problem you can't see until it's already extensive. Maryland's humid climate and clay-heavy soils mean even a basement that's been dry for years can develop hydrostatic seepage as grading shifts and original damp-proofing deteriorates. The right time to find out is before you frame the walls — not after.
OBW provides a complete documentation package at handoff: system layout, sump location, crack repair locations, and restoration zone notes written for the finish contractor. We've worked alongside GCs on basement conversion projects across Maryland and understand how our scope fits into theirs.
Photos added as pre-conversion waterproofing projects are documented — check back for recent OBW conversion jobs
What to Resolve Before Framing Begins
Moisture Warning Signs to Address
Before Your Conversion
None of these conditions prevent a successful conversion. They're the indicators that mean waterproofing needs to happen first — not concurrently with or after framing.
- Any seasonal water at the cove joint or wall base — even if minor and infrequent
- Efflorescence (white mineral deposits) on the block or concrete wall face
- Musty odor that persists regardless of ventilation — indicates moisture in wall or slab
- Visible cracks in the block or poured concrete foundation walls
- Existing sump pump that runs frequently — a functioning sump is a sign water is entering, not that you don't have a water problem
What You Get
What OBW's Pre-Conversion
Waterproofing Includes
Every component is specified for Maryland conditions. The scope ends with a documented, dry, conversion-ready basement.
Full Waterproofing Assessment
Inspector measures the basement, identifies every water entry point, and provides a written quote same day. No vague range, no follow-up sales call.
Perimeter Drain Tile Installation
Hard-cased 4-inch PVC drain tile at the footer. Not corrugated tubing — hard-cased holds its shape under Maryland clay soil pressure for the life of the system.
Sump Pump — Primary + Backup Recommendation
Zoeller cast-iron submersible pump. Battery backup recommended for finished space protection — a power outage during a Maryland storm is a realistic scenario.
Crack Repair Where Identified
OBW's Artery method: V-groove the crack, embed stainless wire mesh, fill with hydraulic cement. Flexes with seasonal wall movement. Carries its own Lifetime Transferable Warranty.
Vapor Barrier Where Applicable
Applied to the slab and lower wall face where vapor transmission is a factor. Reduces humidity levels in the finished space — a meaningful long-term comfort improvement.
Documentation Package for Finish Contractor
System layout, sump location, drain tile run, perimeter concrete restoration zone. Finish contractor has what they need to sequence framing and avoid penetrating the system.
Assessment to Handoff. One to Two Days.
How OBW Prepares Your Basement
for a Finish Contractor
Four phases from initial assessment to documented handoff. The 30-day observation window after install is the last step — it's what gives you confidence before framing begins.
Pre-Conversion Assessment
OBW inspector visits, measures the basement, identifies every active and passive water entry point. We assess whether a full perimeter system is warranted or whether targeted repairs address the specific entry points. Written quote same day.
Drain Tile & Sump Installation
Concrete perimeter is saw-cut, trenched to the footer, and drain tile is installed with washed stone. Sump basin is set and the drain tile is routed to it. Primary and backup pumps are installed and tested. Concrete is restored.
Crack Repair & Vapor Barrier
All identified wall cracks are repaired using the OBW Artery method. Vapor barrier is applied to the slab and lower wall face where applicable. The basement is inspected and photographed before the handoff package is prepared.
Handoff to Finish Contractor
OBW provides a written system documentation package: drain tile layout, sump location, crack repair map, vapor barrier coverage, and restoration zone notes. We recommend a 30-day observation window before framing begins.
Real Maryland Conversions
Recent Pre-Conversion Waterproofing
Projects in Maryland
OBW documents the waterproofing phase of every basement conversion project. Photos and project documentation are added as jobs complete.
Full perimeter drain tile, Zoeller primary and backup pump, crack repair on two walls. Handed off to finish contractor 30 days post-install, dry through three seasons.
Targeted system on a basement with no prior water history — assessed, installed, documented. Finish contractor framed two weeks post-install.
Perimeter drain tile, sump with battery backup, vapor barrier on slab. Documentation package provided to the GC handling the finish scope.
Three-wall perimeter system on a walk-out basement. Crack repair on the uphill wall. Observation window confirmed dry before finish contractor began framing.
Honest Answers. No Sales Pitch.
Common Questions About
Basement Conversion Waterproofing
If your question isn't here, call (443) 855-5600. Our inspectors answer questions and give honest, consultative guidance.
Do I need to waterproof my basement before finishing it?
Yes, and the order matters. Finishing a wet or damp basement — framing walls over a damp slab, insulating before moisture is controlled — creates conditions for mold growth inside finished walls where you can't see or access it. By the time that mold becomes detectable, the finished space requires demolition to remediate. The waterproofing cost is a fraction of the demolition-and-rebuild cost.
OBW's position: waterproof first, verify the system is performing through a Maryland wet season, then hand off to the finish contractor. The waterproofing phase typically takes one to two days. Waiting 30 days after install — ideally through one significant rain event — to confirm the system holds before framing begins is worth it. We document the install and can provide the finish contractor with a written description of the system layout.
If your basement has never shown any water, the calculus changes. An OBW inspector can assess whether a full waterproofing system is warranted or whether a targeted inspection and moisture monitoring is the appropriate starting point before you commit to a finish project.
What does OBW's role include in a basement conversion project?
We handle the waterproofing scope: perimeter drain tile at the footer, crack repair using the Artery method (V-groove, stainless wire mesh, hydraulic cement fill), Zoeller sump pump installation — primary and battery backup as warranted by the water volume and the value of the finished space — and vapor barrier on the slab and lower walls where applicable.
We do not frame, insulate, hang drywall, install flooring, or do any finish carpentry. Our scope ends with a dry, sealed, waterproofed basement that is ready for the finish contractor. We coordinate handoff, provide documentation of the system layout (drain tile run, sump location, vapor barrier coverage), and note any areas the finish contractor should avoid penetrating — particularly the perimeter concrete restoration zone.
If you're working with a general contractor on the finish project, we can communicate directly with them about staging and sequencing. We've worked alongside GCs on basement conversion projects across Baltimore, Harford, and Carroll Counties and understand how our scope fits into theirs.
What permits are required for basement conversion in Maryland?
Finished basement work typically requires a building permit in Maryland — covering the framing, electrical, HVAC, and egress requirements (egress window or existing egress access). The permit requirement and inspection process varies by county: Baltimore County, Harford County, and Anne Arundel County each have their own residential permit process and inspection sequences.
The waterproofing work OBW performs generally does not require a separate permit — it's subslab drainage work that doesn't involve electrical, structural framing, or egress modification. However, the finish contractor's scope almost always requires one.
OBW can provide documentation of the waterproofing installation for the permit file on request — system description, drain tile placement, sump location, and the Lifetime Transferable Guarantee. Some county inspectors want to see evidence that moisture control was addressed before signing off on finished basement insulation.
How much does a basement conversion add to home value in Maryland?
Finished basement square footage typically adds 50 to 70 cents per dollar of finished space value in Maryland's residential market, depending on county and finish quality. A 1,000-square-foot basement finished to a functional standard in Baltimore County might add $40,000 to $60,000 in assessed value. The waterproofing cost as a share of that return is small — typically $4,000 to $10,000 for a standard Maryland basement depending on footage and conditions.
The risk of skipping waterproofing is the full reversal of that gain. A basement that floods six months after being finished — and finished basement flooding is one of the most common homeowner insurance claims in Maryland — costs the full demolition-and-rebuild, plus remediation, plus time without the space. The waterproofing investment protects the entire conversion ROI.
One clarification for appraisal purposes: finished basement square footage is generally counted separately from above-grade living space in Maryland appraisals. The value add is real but may be assessed at a different rate than above-grade finished square footage. Consult with a local appraiser if the value calculation matters to your project decision.
What's the timeline from inspection to finished waterproofing, ready for finish contractors?
Inspection to written quote: same day. OBW inspectors measure the basement, identify water entry points, and provide a written itemized quote before leaving. There's no follow-up sales call, no 'let us get back to you' — you have a specific number same day.
Scheduling: typically two to four weeks from signed quote to job start, depending on season. Spring is OBW's busiest period in Maryland — if you're calling in March or April after a wet winter, expect the longer end of that range. Winters and late summer are typically faster.
Installation: one to two days depending on linear footage and scope. Concrete restoration is part of the install — the floor is poured and finished the same day the system goes in. Concrete reaches walkable strength within 24 hours.
We recommend a 30-day observation period after install before finish contractors begin — ideally through one significant rain event — to confirm the system is performing as designed. That observation window is the time to identify any edge-case entry points the system didn't capture, address them under warranty, and hand off with confidence.
70 Years of Maryland Basements
Why Maryland Homeowners Choose
Oriole for the Waterproofing Phase
Three generations of the Pirog family have been solving Maryland basement problems since Frank Pirog Sr. founded Oriole in 1953.
Waterproofing Scope Only — No Upsell
OBW does the waterproofing. We don't frame, insulate, or finish. We have no incentive to expand our scope beyond what your basement needs — and no high-pressure push toward the largest system.
Documentation That GCs Can Use
The handoff package OBW provides — system layout, sump location, crack repair map, restoration zone notes — is written for the finish contractor, not for a homeowner. It answers the questions a framer actually has.
Lifetime Transferable Guarantee
The waterproofing guarantee transfers automatically to the next homeowner. A finished basement with documented waterproofing coverage is a disclosure asset when you sell.
Family-Owned Since 1953
Frank Pirog Sr. founded Oriole over 70 years ago. Three generations later, Amber Pirog leads the same company with the same standard: do the waterproofing right before anything else goes on top of it.
Waterproofing First. Then Finish.
Three Steps to a Conversion-Ready
Maryland Basement
From inspection to documented handoff, most OBW pre-conversion waterproofing projects complete in one to two days of installation, with results confirmed in the 30-day observation window.
Schedule a Free Inspection
An OBW inspector measures your basement, identifies every water entry point, and provides a written itemized quote same day. No follow-up sales call. A specific number before you leave.
We Install the System
Drain tile, sump pump, crack repair, vapor barrier where applicable — one to two days. Concrete is restored same day. We photograph the installation throughout and prep the documentation package.
Observe, Then Hand Off
30-day observation window — ideally through one rain event — to confirm the system performs as designed. Then your finish contractor gets the documentation package and a dry, warranty-covered basement to build in.
Start with Waterproofing. Finish with Confidence.
Free inspection. Written quote same day. Documented handoff to your finish contractor.
Family-owned since 1953 · MHIC #4247 · Lifetime Transferable Guarantee