Hi, I wondered if I could get some opinions from you other professionals here regarding a problem on one of our jobs. We are working a total refurbishment of a victorian terraced house, including complete insulation, new floors ( not joists) and replastering.
The client supplied the new floorboards, which were kiln dried larch in approx 180mm width, tongued and grooved. Obviously these are required at a certain point in the construction, door frames, heating pipework etc all come through or sit on the floor. The heating was not on, and the house has been open to outside conditions, with guys coming and going etc whilst working for the last 5 weeks since the floor was laid and the plaster skim was dry. There was a 25 sq m screeded floor installed in the kitchen after the upstairs floors were laid and before the downstairs.
We laid the floors and they looked great, however, this weekend, the heating was turned on, as the clients are moving in tomorrow. in the last 2 days, 3 -4 mm gaps have opened up between the boards ( they are all secret nailed to the joists with a porta nailer) and many are cupping.
The client is insisting this is our fault, what is your take on this?
Thanks, Mark
The client supplied the new floorboards, which were kiln dried larch in approx 180mm width, tongued and grooved. Obviously these are required at a certain point in the construction, door frames, heating pipework etc all come through or sit on the floor. The heating was not on, and the house has been open to outside conditions, with guys coming and going etc whilst working for the last 5 weeks since the floor was laid and the plaster skim was dry. There was a 25 sq m screeded floor installed in the kitchen after the upstairs floors were laid and before the downstairs.
We laid the floors and they looked great, however, this weekend, the heating was turned on, as the clients are moving in tomorrow. in the last 2 days, 3 -4 mm gaps have opened up between the boards ( they are all secret nailed to the joists with a porta nailer) and many are cupping.
The client is insisting this is our fault, what is your take on this?
Thanks, Mark