see this stone flooring(and Raechelle and Donna hehe)? It covers the entry way and then goes through the dining room(the room with the rust carpet to the right of the picture) and stops at the door way which leads into the kitchen and family room. We.are.stuck.with.it. Our flooring company has informed me that it is actually cemented into our sub floor and more than 5 inches thick(and apparently pretty common in the claremont area). It would cost too much to remove(thousands) so like I said we are stuck with it, and I'm not happy about it. Harrumph
“There are two ways to live: you can live as if nothing is a miracle; you can live as if everything is a miracle.” ~Albert Einstein
Saturday, March 28, 2009
I'm gonna complain
see this stone flooring(and Raechelle and Donna hehe)? It covers the entry way and then goes through the dining room(the room with the rust carpet to the right of the picture) and stops at the door way which leads into the kitchen and family room. We.are.stuck.with.it. Our flooring company has informed me that it is actually cemented into our sub floor and more than 5 inches thick(and apparently pretty common in the claremont area). It would cost too much to remove(thousands) so like I said we are stuck with it, and I'm not happy about it. Harrumph
3 comments:
What about installing a wood subfloor alongside it at the same level and installing you new flooring over the whole thing?
hmmm, Ill call my flooring company tomorrow. Im guessing they would ask me to do that on my own and then have them install. Im using a private company but these folks wont even do the rolling under of the carpet in the 3 bedrooms we are leaving it as is so Im doubtful they would do the subfloors...which would need to be installed in the majority of the house. I wonder how much that would cost? plywood subfloors cant be *that* expensive. thanks for the idea Susan.
Wow! Those are stuck on there! I wonder why it was done that way?
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