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• #62277
Sounds like you're doing it backwards. The last time someone flooded our place we said "you flooded our place, pay to fix it". Why would I fuck my own insurance because of someone else?
British fucking "sensitivities" is why insurance companies are so rich.
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• #62278
If you can convince upstairs to fix it without going through your insurer there's nothing wrong with that, it's just not guaranteed. You'd have to rely on your powers of persuasion, intimidation, or your upstairs neighbours ignorance of the law and willingness to pay AND to do it to a proper standard. If those things are a possibility it's worth a bash.
However I've been in this situation multiple times and the only thing I've found that works consistently is going via your insurer so they can contact your neighbour and take care of the problem. Either your neighbour has insurance in which case the companies will know what to do, or your neighbour doesn't in which case your insurance company can chase them through the courts for remedy. Either way the problem isn't yours anymore, and that's ultimately what you pay for with insurance.
Fwiw when I did this, I didn't have to pay an increased premium. Suspect this might happen to people with no claims discounts, who then make a claim, but I think that's about it.
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• #62279
Less to do with British sensitivities and more to do with how it's actually supposed to be done I think.
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• #62280
With building damage the other party is liable if they are negligent but otherwise not.
There was a tail in the press a few years ago about a little old lady without insurance. Her neighbours chimney fell down through her roof. She couldn't afford to fix her roof and next door were not liable.
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• #62281
Ok, thanks all. Guess I'm just sick of dealing with insurance companies - after the crash, trying to get money back from travel insurance and health insurance was like blood from a stone for months. It's more stressful than the feckin' accident!
Is it negligent to have unplugged a washing machine and left it to leak through my ceiling? Or is that somehow my problem and now up to me to resolve via insurance? I guess the legal definition of this is why you involve insurance.
It would be a terrible shame if their empty flat was broken into and squatted by foxes with gastro though..
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• #62282
Good luck with sorting.
Reminds me of our friends who came back one day to find the entire ceiling collapsed in the lounge after washing machine above had been pumping water all day .
They could actually see up to the flat above . -
• #62283
Doesn’t really answer the question or what you wrote.
Is the upstairs a flat, is it your house if it’s your house did someone do work recently?
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• #62284
We're about to do our kitchen. We were originally going to replace the floor at the same time, but for the sake of costs might just live with the tiles that are currently in there. The kitchen is already on a concrete / level floor so should not need work under the tiles.
Does anyone know if it would possible to replace the tiles at a later date (in a few years perhaps) if the units are already there? Appreciate that it's likely harder and more expensive than doing it now, but for the sake of costs this year is it still a viable job to do?
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• #62285
Yeah, I think the tenants upstairs left, unplugged a washing machine but didn't turn the tap off properly or something and water has been dripping and has now entered our flat from the roof, into our recently redone kitchen cupboard. ie. it's not our fault, someone else has damaged our property.
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• #62286
Wowsers. Lucky we were here and hadn't disappeared for xmas travel or something.
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• #62287
Underneath the existing units are there tiles? Or is it just the subfloor (concrete).
You should be able to build the units on top of the subfloor and then have the plinth hide the unfinished floor, the only thing to consider is the height difference between current tiles and future floor covering (which might affect how short you trim your plinth and the height you set your units)
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• #62288
Thanks, the units are currently on the subfloor. Guess that means that there's be no excavation of the floor under the units needed when we came to change, sounds promising.
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• #62289
Landlord should have insurance so you should be able to claim through that but you'll probs still have to go through your insurance for them to claim theres. Id get onto the letting agent.
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• #62290
The missus has been talking to the agency that manages the flats.
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• #62291
We're currently on a tracker mortgage (base rate +0.87%) as when our last deal expired last year, the talk was all of successive rate cuts in 2o24.
That's not really happened, and we nearly switched to a five year fixed on 3.89% recently.
That deal no longer exists, and the best rate with our current provider is now 4.09%.
Anyone else who has renewed or switched lately - did you stick or twist?
4.09% is still less than we're paying now, and the idea would be to keep paying what we're paying now so there was an overpayment every month.
Still bitter about Truss and Kwarteng - we were on 0.97% on our last deal.
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• #62292
We had a wood floor installed around our existing kitchen. Trimming the plinth neatly is the main drawback, and it would mean cutting tiles or planning tiles to butt up against those places where the kitchen meets the floor. There is also a risk of damage to cabinets. Our guys were careful and we knew our existing kitchen wouldn't be perfect.
If you've got tiles then I wonder if there is a way to remove the current tiles where your new kitchen will meet the floor and install a temporary/semi-perm spacer. That way you minimise damage to the cabinets touching the floor, and give flexibility for tile size/layout etc. so it visually can flow under the cabinets.
Maybe also ask in the diy thread. Or would @Airhead have any ideas?
All that said tilers are used to working around objects. So doing it later is by no means insurmountable.
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• #62293
Thanks for the reply - I think we'll bite the bullet, but only refloor the part of the kitchen where the units are. The rest of the room is open plan / living room, so would have been different flooring anyway.
Rather than do the whole lot (42sq metres) well just do the kitchen bit (c.15 sq metres). That seems to be the optimum way to approach without too much regret work later on.
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• #62294
Sounds like a plan. I'd probably try not to go too niche on the tiles incase you want to partially match them down the line.
Given the relative low cost of tiling it makes sense to knock it out now. You could always look at doing it yourself to reduce costs. If you're employed, then there are a lot of bugs this time of year.
If I drove a car into your bedroom and smashed it to pieces, you'd go and speak to your insurer?
I mean, I guess that's a thing, but I'm going to start with the cunts upstairs that caused the damage first.