Wooden flooring for flat

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Fat hippo

Original Poster:

732 posts

134 months

Wednesday 22nd October 2014
quotequote all
Currently looking to refurbish my flat that has been let ou for past couple of years with a view to sell next year.
Looking to replace the existing laminate flooring in living room and hallway with engineered wood.

Flatnis on the first floor and moaning neighbours have complained about noise below.
Will a good quality underlay reduce noisenor sjouldni look at acoustic board or is there another alternative.

Although the lease says I can't have wooden floors, the previous owners paid anpenalty and a licence to alter from the previous freeholder before they sold to me so as far as i'm aware i can't be forced to re-imstate with carpet. Or am misunderstanding this?

Fat hippo

Original Poster:

732 posts

134 months

Wednesday 22nd October 2014
quotequote all
Frybywire said:
Despite the lease saying you are not allowed bare floors and the "moaning' neighbours complaining, you sill want to go ahead and annoy the neighbours? Wow you are neighbour from hell.
I'm honestly not a neighbour from hell. The flat above me has laminate floors and I don't complain about the noise and the flat below me has just exposed floorboards.
My 'moaning' neighbour below thunks she owns the building using my allocated parking, blaming me for water leaks arising from gutters and downpipes on her ground floor flat that she has access ti but won't clean out, blaming me for the mould in her wardrobe next to her bathroom as she doesnt open the window for letting the air circulate and best of all telling me i'm not allowed to sell my flat to someone with children.


Fat hippo

Original Poster:

732 posts

134 months

Wednesday 22nd October 2014
quotequote all
Funk said:
You realise that breaching your lease could see you forfeit the property, right...?
Even of a licence to alter has been granted by the previous freeholder?
I'm not a lawyer, but from what i've read on similar cases, where a licence to alter has been franted it can't subsequently be revoked so technically i'm no longe in breach of the lease.

Fat hippo

Original Poster:

732 posts

134 months

Wednesday 22nd October 2014
quotequote all
Paul Drawmer said:
The link I supplied above says this:

"has been used to comply with leases that state only carpets or equivalent can be used in flats, when used below solid floor finishes it will be equal to or better than the acoustic performance required in these cases."
Excellent. This is the sort of thing I am after. Have you used it, and if so how effective was it?
Clearly this would be an improvement over my exisitng laminate but I wonder how much noisier it would be compared to a carpet and underlay?