South Baltimore Rowhouse Owner Says Her Home Is Teetering Over Hidden Caverns

Nancy Waldhaus has called her South Baltimore rowhouse home since 1994. Now she says it feels like the ground under that life is literally shifting. In recent months, Waldhaus says floors have pulled away from baseboards and new cracks have snaked across walls and tile. After a heavy April 2024 storm, a tree on the city-owned lot next door suddenly dropped several feet, she says, and she filed a 3-1-1 report.

Waldhaus hired a structural engineer, who measured crack growth that reached a 2 millimeter threshold and recommended borings to inspect the soils beside her foundation. The homeowner worries the movement under her house could be connected to a long-buried network of 19th-century sand and clay mines beneath the neighborhood.

Homeowner’s Alarm and Professional Warnings

Waldhaus says the first red flag came when she realized she could slide her hand under baseboards where the floor had pulled away. After the April storm, she says small gaps opened between her front steps and the house itself. Her consultant told her the cracks were growing quickly enough that immediate borings were needed to find out whether the house still sits on solid material.

Because the neighboring lot is city-owned, Waldhaus says she requested permission from the city to get those tests done. She says that the request went unanswered for months. According to WMAR 2 News, she remains stuck, unable to repair or sell, because the city has not laid out a clear remediation plan.

A 1951 Warning

The fear that the ground might give way in this part of South Baltimore is not new. A 1951 city report documented a web of man-made caverns about 30 feet below the 600 block of East Clement Street after several basements suddenly collapsed, prompting officials to condemn and demolish six rowhouses…

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