2manyrocks
Super Member
- Joined
- Jul 28, 2007
- Messages
- 8,637
A thorough cleaning can do wonders to get rid of odors. I own a commercial carpet cleaner. There can be a heck of a lot of odor trapped in a carpet.
Floor and ceiling are drywall. The floor is either going to be replaced or covered. The existing floor is a floating floor but some of the floor is wet and damaged. I cannot find the source of the water. There is no plumbing to the building and the wet spot is a couple feet from the wall and the only door. I am going to remove the sections of flooring where it is wet. When our house was built we had 3/4" maple floors put down. Truly lovely and wonderful floors. And we had flooring left over. It has been stacked in the garage up off of the floor for about 15 years now. There may be enough for the room. We are considering having it put in the room. In fact, it is almost a sure thing that we will be replacing the floor with the maple.What floor and ceiling materials do you have? Drywall on the walls? Anything else left in the room that would have absorbed odors?
Floor and ceiling are drywall. The floor is either going to be replaced or covered. The existing floor is a floating floor but some of the floor is wet and damaged. I cannot find the source of the water. There is no plumbing to the building and the wet spot is a couple feet from the wall and the only door. I am going to remove the sections of flooring where it is wet. When our house was built we had 3/4" maple floors put down. Truly lovely and wonderful floors. And we had flooring left over. It has been stacked in the garage up off of the floor for about 15 years now. There may be enough for the room. We are considering having it put in the room. In fact, it is almost a sure thing that we will be replacing the floor with the maple.
Thanks,
Eric