Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have asbestos tiles in the basement of our 1950s brick rambler. The previous owners had carpeted the basement just before selling. We pulled up the carpet a few years later and covered the tile with self-level cement a few years later in the finished area. The original asbestos tile was still visible in the unfinished part of the basement but nothing was broken.
We are now prepping our home for sale and the entire basement floor has been covered with LVP.
Thank you. I’ll google what LVP is.
Did you have to hire an abatement company in addition to the installers?
Fake wood vinyl floor. Also toxic
Anonymous wrote:I would not put LVP in. Tile is much better and better for resale; also non toxic. LVP manufacturers claim it’s not toxic but that’s not the nature of vinyl
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have asbestos tiles in the basement of our 1950s brick rambler. The previous owners had carpeted the basement just before selling. We pulled up the carpet a few years later and covered the tile with self-level cement a few years later in the finished area. The original asbestos tile was still visible in the unfinished part of the basement but nothing was broken.
We are now prepping our home for sale and the entire basement floor has been covered with LVP.
Thank you. I’ll google what LVP is.
Did you have to hire an abatement company in addition to the installers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have asbestos tiles in the basement of our 1950s brick rambler. The previous owners had carpeted the basement just before selling. We pulled up the carpet a few years later and covered the tile with self-level cement a few years later in the finished area. The original asbestos tile was still visible in the unfinished part of the basement but nothing was broken.
We are now prepping our home for sale and the entire basement floor has been covered with LVP.
Thank you. I’ll google what LVP is.
Did you have to hire an abatement company in addition to the installers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have asbestos tiles in the basement of our 1950s brick rambler. The previous owners had carpeted the basement just before selling. We pulled up the carpet a few years later and covered the tile with self-level cement a few years later in the finished area. The original asbestos tile was still visible in the unfinished part of the basement but nothing was broken.
We are now prepping our home for sale and the entire basement floor has been covered with LVP.
Thank you. I’ll google what LVP is.
Did you have to hire an abatement company in addition to the installers?