Failed Tile Floor - Contractor Obligations?
13 years ago
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- 13 years ago
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CA - tile lippage, contractor advice / suggestions
Comments (2)Only you can decide what you're willing to deal with here. I will say that if you decide to go before the contractor's board, they will expect that you've tried all avenues to correct the problem with the contactor FIRST before resorting to them. And they will look at the specs of the job overall, and what would have been a reasonable result to have been expected given the site conditions and the contract language. If you are the one that set the specs of the job and then got bids for it based on those specs, then you cannot hold a contractor at fault for following the specs that you set forth. Was the difficulty of installing large format tile discussed with you at all by anyone before you chose it? Even with perfect slab prep, you will have some lippage with large format tile. It bows in the middle. It's the nature of the tile to have lippage when installed in any other pattern than stacked where the bows in the middle align. And that's why manufacturers only recommend a 1/3 offset pattern. It minimizes any lippage issue. Is that the pattern you chose for the tile? Or is it a "random" pattern. That will create more lippage that wouldn't be the contractor's issue. It's the nature of the tile coming in to play. And it would be installed contrary to the manufacturer's recommendations, so it wouldn't be supported as an actionable item. Any tile floor can only be as flat as the substrate it's installed on. What type of diagnostics did you or the contractor do to determine what type of prep the slab would need? Would you have been willing to pay an additional $500-1K to ensure that you had a problem free install? That would include grinding down high spots, and filling low spots until the floor was flat enough to support large format tile. Was the flatness of the slab discussed at all? If you would have been willing to pay for better prep, then the contractor should have done that better prep at the additional cost. A true tile pro would have at least brought it to your attention and had you sign off on it if you refused to do so. If the condition of the slab was brought to your attention, then you really don't have a lot of recourse for the issues that you are seeing. As far as the cleanliness of the job site, contractors usually stipulate "broom clean" which doesn't mean move in ready. It means the majority of trash is gathered up and the place is swept. It doesn't mean mopped and scrubbed. You should always plan on cleaning a space post renovation, or hiring a cleaning service to address the job. Renovation produces lots of dust and dirt and it gets everywhere. It's not your contractor's job to deal with that unless it's written into the contract that he will hire the cleaning service upon job completion. That would be a higher bid for the job, of course. It sounds as though your tile job simply needs a good initial scrubdown....See MoreMisaligned honeycomb floor tile. Contractor is going to grout tomorrow
Comments (8)Well laid sheets of tile will NEVER have the look of "sheets of tile". The installer is the weakest link in the chain. If this is an insurance claim, then you may have to work with the insurance company's "preferred installers". And that normally means "low-end" quality. The preferred GC's have the lowest bids in the industry (many reputable companies will NOT work with insurance companies because they want the cheapest of the cheap). And real tile setters are expensive. Which means most of these companies will simply use "a guy" to lay the tiles. I would say you are looking at "a guy" type of install. In the world of tile this is not considered acceptable. It would be a redo. My guess is this is the best possible install this guy could manage. Getting him to do it again will probably result in the same issues...which is why you want to ensure the GC is using a tiling professional and not some guy with a trowel. I'm going to guess the GC will be quite indignant should you ask about the qualifications of his crew. Did you know that most insurance companies will offer a "pay out"? This would allow you to find your own company to do the work? I would push hard for a redo. In the building industry the original installer is allowed ONE attempt to correct an issue. Once that one attempt is made (and failed) then you can bring in another professional to do the work...at the original installer's expense. I would check your local/state laws on that one...but you are within your rights to move on should the 'fix' work out to be worse than the original install. Just a little FYI. Do you have any photos of the build BEFORE the finishes were installed? If there is an issue with the quality of the finishes, there are often issues with the quality of the water proofing, etc UNDERNEATH the finishes....See MoreHelp with tile to wood transition fail please
Comments (4)added pic. couldn't do anything while at house [no wifi bad service lol] i am searching for the idea of a liquid metal caulk.... I'm thinking I could blend it so it looks like a thicker transition? better than a big gap... ideas anyone? hubby is trying to get the tiler to come out but he blames us ? [how?] but really you should check all work before contractors leave. so lesson for others. luckily hubby hadn't done the wood in the other rooms yet so he was able to butt the wood perfectly against the metal transition as they should have done with the tile... guy claims he thought we were doing a wood transition...why would I have given you metal transitions and shown a picture even? grrr....See MoreHelp! Contractor did not put waterproofing under shower floor
Comments (39)@Nona Muss - I understand exactly what you’re going through. My first contractor didn’t do a pre slope under the pvc liner on shower floor. We got that addressed - and then he decided to not use any of the three bags of white thinset (he purchased) to install the carrara tile on the shower walls - but instead used mastic ”because it was faster.” When we pushed the issue, he packed up and left. The second contractor (with over 200 4.9 star Google reviews) sent over his “business partner” to bid the work. His “business partner“ then said that he felt so bad for me re: every thing that had happened with the first contractor (including needing to rip out the slate bathroom floor bc several pieces failed to bond), that he would start the work himself ASAP + work over the upcoming weekend. Well, it turns out that he wasn’t a “business partner” - but a new employee. He produced fraudulent receipts for materials (that I reimbursed upon recipt per contract) - and stopped showing up. I did a quick background check and discovered that he had been in prison for over nine years for aggravated battery + fraud charges (had been out for 18 months). I asked the owner about whether he had done a background check - he told me that he hadn’t run it yet. After I told him about the results of the background check I did, the owner asked me if I noticed the scar on the guy’s upper arm - and then told me that when he asked the employee about it, he said it was from “being shot by a cop.” I swear I am not making this up. He also stole some jewelry from me. Third contractor - great guy - had just started work - and then was sentenced to 90 days in jail related to a third DUI conviction. My fourth (and final) contractor is AMAZING. The third and fourth ones are both TCNA certified - I didn’t hire the first or second one - my SO did. Although I don’t blame him for what happened. My SO had glowing references from two of his law partners who had used the first guy for several projects + did research on the second one (who was the second highest bid out of five). I thought that by now I would have not only finished two bathroom renovations - but also my laundry room + kitchen reno (which is close to starting FINALLY). I actually wish I had never even begun - my bathrooms were fine - just a little dated....See MoreRelated Professionals
Grafton Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · Southampton Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · United States Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · Covington Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · Hunters Creek Kitchen & Bathroom Remodelers · Independence Kitchen & Bathroom Remodelers · Gaffney Cabinets & Cabinetry · Palos Verdes Estates Cabinets & Cabinetry · Roanoke Cabinets & Cabinetry · Universal City Cabinets & Cabinetry · Vermillion Cabinets & Cabinetry · Phelan Cabinets & Cabinetry · Edwards Tile and Stone Contractors · Santa Rosa Tile and Stone Contractors · Suamico Design-Build Firms- 13 years ago
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