N
Noreng
Unfortunately for us ours was one of the 1400 homes flooded in Cumbria recently.
We have had a number of visits from loss adjusters, surveyers, restoration technicians and builders, and the destruction starts on Monday.
One casualty is the oak floor that I spent a lot of money on, and time laying - it has to come up!
I have discussed with various parties having a tile floor instead of wood, so as to be more flood resistant should it ever happen again (although I prefer wood). However I have been advised that often tile floors are taken up after a flood, and even that my quarry tiles elsewhere laid in a solid concrete base may have to come up - which seems rather strange to me! (if there was any wood underneath that would of course be different)
So my questions are:
We have had a number of visits from loss adjusters, surveyers, restoration technicians and builders, and the destruction starts on Monday.
One casualty is the oak floor that I spent a lot of money on, and time laying - it has to come up!
I have discussed with various parties having a tile floor instead of wood, so as to be more flood resistant should it ever happen again (although I prefer wood). However I have been advised that often tile floors are taken up after a flood, and even that my quarry tiles elsewhere laid in a solid concrete base may have to come up - which seems rather strange to me! (if there was any wood underneath that would of course be different)
So my questions are:
- Why would quarry tiles laid on solid concrete have to come up after a flood, ok it will be a bit wetter than it was before for a while but so what, probably no worse than when they were first laid and nothing is going to deteriorate.
- Can you lay a flood proof floor onto solid concrete? My thoughts were that to provide some insulation Wedi board (which is waterproof) could be laid on top of the concrete with waterproof tile adhesive, then some waterproof tiles laid on that with more waterproof adhesive and then finished with waterproof grout. That sounds like it should all be pretty flood proof to me.