slave1 wrote: » 200mm not 20, OP your floor has sunk and 2cm is a pretty big amount, is this a new build? Waste of time if still sinking
Cat_M wrote: » Can you use filler and paint over it? What filler would you use? Thanks. Could it be done in a day or would it be dry enough to sand/ paint in same day if so? Thanks.
awec wrote: » What to do in this situation depends on why you have the gap IMO.
Cat_M wrote: » No idea why. It's been there'since I bought the house 15 years ago. It didn't come for mention in my survey. I didn't notice as ther was lino on top of the tiles vwhen I bought it. Didn't bother me but now I'm selling up and wondering if it will bother anyone else.
listermint wrote: » Hmm... That could have just been a crap flooring and skirting job. Rather than subsidence
chuck eastwood wrote: » Rip it off. Get a decent floor paint from the likes of AIC in tallaght and put back on a new skirting of about 150mm. Days work and it will look great
RebelButtMunch wrote: » Perhaps there was a wooden floor on top of the tiles that had been removed
Car99 wrote: » Get a lenght of fairly simple looking architrave, nail it to the existing skirting along the entire lenght . It will look good when finished.
Cat_M wrote: » So you mean covering what's there ?
Cat_M wrote: It's only bad at a section . Not the whole way around.
Archer Ambitious Stack wrote: » So are you saying the skirting reaches the tile except for that section.
awec wrote: » Is your floor level? The only way you have a gap that big in one part but not another is either your floor is not level, your skirtings are a different size or your skirtings are wonky.
Cat_M wrote: » Maybe the floor is not level. Husband insists it is as per spirit level but I'm not sure..