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 MOLD SOURCES
All mold needs to grow is the right climate and a food sources.
Oxygen-rich environments with humidity over 70% and temperatures above 60 degrees Fahrenheit are ideal for mold growth, which happen to be also be ideal temperatures for human comfort.
In the summer, when air-conditioning is in use, mold growth can occur in and around vents and duct work in buildings. In the winter, when buildings are heated, mold often grows in wall spaces between the warm indoor air and the cold outdoor air. In either scenario, ideal conditions for mold growth are inside exterior windows and walls where one side of the wall is colder than the other, (especially uninsulated closet walls along exterior walls), water vapor can condense on building surfaces, just as it does on the outside of a glass of ice water on a warm, humid day.
 
     OTHER SOURCES OF MOLD
          • Flooding & Water leaks   • HVAC Air Ducts
          • Sprinkler spray hitting the house • Overflow from sinks or sewers
          • Damp basement or crawl space • Steam from shower or cooking
          • Wet clothes drying indoors • Dark unventilated areas
          • Swamp coolers • Humidifiers
   
Following are some moisture problems that cause indoor mold growth: 

Water Intrusion 
Rainwater can enter a building through leaks in walls, windows or the roof. Surface or ground water may enter when there is poor foundation drainage. Flooding can, of course, cause catastrophic intrusion. In buildings that have slab construction, water can seep or wick up through the cement floor causing mold to grow on carpet pads or carpet backing. The building envelope (walls, windows, floors , roof , etc.) must be well maintained to prevent water from coming in, both to prevent mold growth and to maintain the structural integrity of the building. 

Water Vapor 
When relative humidity (a temperature-dependent measure of water vapor in air) becomes elevated indoors, building materials and furnishings absorb the moisture. Those damp materials can then provide a good place for mold to grow. If there are no cold condensing surfaces and the relative humidity (RH) is maintained below 60 percent indoors, there will not be enough water in those materials for mold to grow. However, if the RH stays above 70 percent indoors for extended periods of time, mold will almost certainly grow. 

Damp Concrete
Wet or damp concrete slabs often contribute to indoor mold problems. Concrete absorbs water like a sponge. Wet concrete in and of itself, is not a problem. However, construction materials that are attached to wet concrete, such as wood framing, wood flooring, carpet, pad, tack strip, cabinets, etc., can all absorb the moisture from a concrete slab, causing those materials to deteriorate over time and establishing the ideal conditions and food sources for accelerated mold growth.

How does concrete get wet? A number of ways:

  1. It never actually dried. Concrete is poured wet, but often times, building contractors are under pressure to meet deadlines and don't allow sufficient drying time for the concrete before construction begins. The result is, the slab stays wet for months, even years longer than it should have, and in some case may never really dry out. In recent years some builders have adopted minimum moisture requirements for concrete before construction can begin, meaning they will not start framing a structure until the concrete slab has reached a specific moisture level.
     
  2. Insufficient moisture barrier. Before indoor mold conditions became the big issue it is today, little attention was paid to installing moisture barriers under poured concrete slabs. Inadequate or non-existent moisture barriers under concrete slabs is a serious problem, especially in places like California where subterranean conditions exist (meaning the land slopes toward the structure) because rain and irrigation water flows to the slab, often saturating the ground below.
     
  3. Improper irrigation and/or drainage is a major contributor to excessive slab moisture. A high percentage of the indoor mold problems we encounter are the direct result of sprinklers hitting the house and saturating the walls or foundation. As a rule, people tend to over-water landscaping, and often times soaking shrubs, sod and flowers that make contact with exterior walls. In other instances, the landscape isn't necessarily over-watered, but the ground against the building stays wet due to insufficient drainage.
     
  4. Plumbing issues. This includes under-slab water supply lines that break or leak, interior water supply lines to plumbing fixtures that break or leak onto the slab, habitual water spillage from over-flowing bath tubs and showers, dried out wax rings or improperly seated toilets, leaking icemaker supply lines, hot water tanks, dishwashers, washing machines, humidifiers, etc.
     
  5. Caulk and grout. Bath tub and shower grout and caulk are things we don't often think about until we see mold growing. By the it's already a problem. Regular maintenance of tub and tile grout and caulking can't effectively reduce the potential for bathroom mold, and in some instance eliminate it. It should be noted that some builders do not seal tub and shower tile work. Even if they do, sealing is not a once in a life time event. Tub and shower tile work and tile floors should be re-sealed once a year to prevent grout leaks and moisture from seeping under tile.

How to tell if you have a wet slab. The best way to acquire factual data about the condition of your slab is to have it professionally tested. AMI uses state-of-the-art electronic moisture detection equipment that can provide you with specific details. There's also a couple of visual tests you do on your own that won't provide specific details but will indicate whether or not your slab is wet.

1. Pull back the carpeting near an exterior wall and look to see if the nails in the tack strip are rusty, or if the tack strip itself shows any evidence of water stains, dry rot or erosion.

2. Place a heavy item porous in nature on the slab and leave it there for a few days. When you remove the item, check to see if there is a wet stain outline on the concrete where the item sat.

A positive answer to either of these two visual tests is a strong indication of a wet concrete slab. Some indoor air quality specialists do not agree that wet or damp concrete is a cause of indoor mold problems. With all due respect to "specialists", wet concrete slabs do contribute to moisture problems in other porous construction materials, which when wet can cause rotting, deterioration and a host of serious mold problems.

NOTE: Most installers of hard-surface flooring such as wood and tile will not guarantee adhesion of flooring materials over concrete if the concrete exceeds moisture levels of 17%.

Plants
Plants, trees and flowers are known to cause mold and mold spores. Also, watering indoor plants often causes mold problems, particularly when water spills over onto flooring and walls.

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