Hi, hope someone can help me here.
We recently removed laminate flooring in a new property, uncovering wooden floorboards downstairs, and found that where a chimney hearth had once been there was a flush concrete slab. About a quarter of the slab is prone to damp and you can feel moisture coming up through it especially when weather has been bad.
We now wish to lay a new solid wood floor, but I am convcerned about putting this down, whilst there is a potential damp problem - a floor fitter recently checked moisture and said it was quite high and that he could fit the floor but not give a guarantee whilst there was this small area of damp.
I am getting conflicting info ranging from one extreme - "this is natural in houses like this and is nothing to worry about" to the other "its very serious, and if you dont address the damp issue it will
penetrate the whole of your ground floor as et then dry rot"
Would a damp proof membrane help if spread over the area which is prone to moisture?
One of the flooring guys I had round said that f the damp hadn't affected the laminate florring (it hadn't) then it wont affect wood flooring?
Any adfvise on this would be helpful - I have stuck my head under the floor and can see that under the hearth and the floorboards is a brick construction which is very wet - is this normal?
We recently removed laminate flooring in a new property, uncovering wooden floorboards downstairs, and found that where a chimney hearth had once been there was a flush concrete slab. About a quarter of the slab is prone to damp and you can feel moisture coming up through it especially when weather has been bad.
We now wish to lay a new solid wood floor, but I am convcerned about putting this down, whilst there is a potential damp problem - a floor fitter recently checked moisture and said it was quite high and that he could fit the floor but not give a guarantee whilst there was this small area of damp.
I am getting conflicting info ranging from one extreme - "this is natural in houses like this and is nothing to worry about" to the other "its very serious, and if you dont address the damp issue it will
penetrate the whole of your ground floor as et then dry rot"
Would a damp proof membrane help if spread over the area which is prone to moisture?
One of the flooring guys I had round said that f the damp hadn't affected the laminate florring (it hadn't) then it wont affect wood flooring?
Any adfvise on this would be helpful - I have stuck my head under the floor and can see that under the hearth and the floorboards is a brick construction which is very wet - is this normal?