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Photograph: fungus and mold growing on dirt at a crawl space concrete block wall -  © Daniel Friedman Mold on Dirt in Crawl Spaces, Basements, Floors
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  • How to recognize and remove mold contamination from dirt or soil such as in crawl spaces or other dirt floors
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This document gives advice on how to find and deal with mold growing on dirt or soil surfaces such as in building crawl spaces or in dirt floor basements. This is a chapter of "How to Look for Mold" describes how to find mold and test for mold in buildings, including how and where to collect mold samples using adhesive tape - an easy, inexpensive, low-tech but very effective mold testing method.

This procedure helps identify the presence of or locate the probable sources of mold reservoirs in buildings, and helps decide which of these need more invasive, exhaustive inspection and testing.

© Copyright 2008 Daniel Friedman, All Rights Reserved. Information Accuracy & Bias Pledge is at below-left. Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website.

MOLD ON DIRT FLOORS: Mold on Dirt in Basements & Crawl Spaces

Many readers have asked us what to do about mold found growing on crawl space dirt or on a dirt basement floor. I've often seen orange and yellow molds and yeasts growing on wet dirt in these areas.

Depending on genera/species a mold growing on dirt might be toxic, pathogenic, or allergenic, though in my experience (warning, I am not a mycologist) I haven't come across dirt-growing molds that were species that were airborne - at least not at the time of my inspection and under wet conditions.

So the chance that such a mold passes throughout a building as problem spores is lower than otherwise. Still, one would want to be careful not to get mold in a cut, or in your eye, even if it does not appear to be an airborne species that can be easily inhaled.

Mold might also be growing apparently on dirt but actually on something that spilled or was left atop the dirt - which could mean other fungal species than the soil fungi I just cited.

In any case if there is only a small amount of mold - a few square feet - it's reasonable for a homeowner to remove the visible mold and surface soil - just an inch or less. There may be fungal components deeper in the soil, but we're going to address that by drying out the area rather than digging up the whole house.

If the area of mold on dirt is large, more than 30 sq.ft., and if it's not a harmless cosmetic mold, professional cleanup would be appropriate, but only after a competent and independent (independent from the cleaning company) inspection diagnosed the extent and cause of mold and thus provided you with a mold cleanup plan.

If you see a large area of moldy soil that appears homogenous in character (color, pattern, growth surface, etc) then it may be economical to collect a sample to send to an independent lab for identification (mine or any independent mold testing lab - I give instructions on how to collect mold samples at Mold Test Kit Procedures.)

It's essential to also find and correct the cause of mold growth: Any mold cleanup anywhere in a building, whether its on crawlspace dirt or basement soils, must be followed by a diagnosis and correction of the moisture source that invited the mold growth, or the mold problem will simply recur.

Furthermore, and possibly more important, soil mold in a basement or crawl space is an indicator of wet conditions, which means that more-problematic molds may be growing on wood or paper or other organic surfaces nearby - and may be more of a problem for building occupants.

An inspection of wood framing and subfloor over a damp moldy dirt-crawl space or basement should be conducted using light and careful examination of the surfaces - see my online article about how to use light when looking for mold.

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More Information on Finding, Recognizing, and Proper Testing for Mold, More on Building Diagnostic Inspections and Repairs

Mold and Allergen Recognition and Identification - Not All "Black Mold" is Harmful; Some Suspect Stuff is Not Mold

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09/27/2008 - 04/01/2002 - www.inspect-ny.com/sickhouse/lookmold.htm © Copyright 2008-2002 Daniel Friedman - All Rights Reserved