Hi,
I live in an old Victorian House (built 1890's), I employed a builder to fix some damp issues where it required the hall floor to be pulled up. The old floor has been dug down to allow air to circulate from some newly fitted air bricks under the front door step, all the way through the length of the hall and then through some further air bricks into the cellar. The cellar is also well ventilated and so I hope this now resolves the problem which has been ongoing for years.
Anyway, the builder used a lazer level and fitted a fantastically level sub floor using new joists and a 1" thick marine ply to ensure there is no flex in the floor whatsoever, it partly goes over a cellar and has been problematic with movement in the past. The issue is that the new subfloor might be perfectly level and fit for a new build house but being an old house, its now presented me with a problem as the adjoining room floor heights and the front door step are at different levels. The drop in floor height at one end is 30mm, in the middle to the 1st room is 20mm and then at the far end of the hall the drop in floor height is 35mm.
My intention is to fit some reclaimed vicorian square edge floorboards lengthways down the hall to match the adjoining living room floor.
The floorboards are approx 20mm thick, they are perfectly level with the living room floor but how can I adjust the levels to raise the floorboards by approx 15mm at the far end of the hall and by approx 10mm at the near end of the hall floor?
I then plan to nail the boards with square headed nails to give the same look as the boards laid in the adjoining living room floor. I assume this is ok and that fitting on top of a marine ply subfloor wont represent a problem?
To finish I will give them a sand down and then apply a floor polish/protector identical to what was applied to the living room floor so that it matches.
Thanks in advance for any help and advice.
Cheers,
Richard.