There are thanks you can do to minimize this risk. We put in a tile floor with a floor drain in our laundry room. If there was torrential water we might have a problem, but the average leak should just go down the drain.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I bought my house because of the 2nd floor laundry room. My favorite thing. So fab.
Me too! Sold me on our home. I overlooked imperfections in our home due to the 2nd story laundry room. I will always want my laundry room on the level where our dirty laundry is accumulated.
I'm curious about the worries about leaking and flooding. We've never had a problem with leaking laundry machines or flooding. We have bathrooms upstairs that would be equally prone to water problems, no?
If we someday have a problem with a leak, the years of convenience will make up for it, IMO. And we have insurance ?
Maybe the people worried about leaks have never had laundry rooms upstairs. To me, not putting the washer and dryer near the dirty laundry would be the euivalent of keeping a stove or refrigerator in the basement. Impractical.
We just did a large reno and left the washer and dryer in the basement. For a while I was wondering if we made a mistake until we talked to a plumber. He worked on a house that was newly remodeled with the 2nd floor laundry. He said the bottom floor of this house flooded and it was 100K in damage. Sure the insurance probably covered it but they had to move out and go through all that headache. Not worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I bought my house because of the 2nd floor laundry room. My favorite thing. So fab.
Me too! Sold me on our home. I overlooked imperfections in our home due to the 2nd story laundry room. I will always want my laundry room on the level where our dirty laundry is accumulated.
I'm curious about the worries about leaking and flooding. We've never had a problem with leaking laundry machines or flooding. We have bathrooms upstairs that would be equally prone to water problems, no?
If we someday have a problem with a leak, the years of convenience will make up for it, IMO. And we have insurance ?
Maybe the people worried about leaks have never had laundry rooms upstairs. To me, not putting the washer and dryer near the dirty laundry would be the euivalent of keeping a stove or refrigerator in the basement. Impractical.
Anonymous wrote:As someone who has always had the laundry on the ground floor, I wouldn't have gone into house-hunting with this on my wish list at all. Count me as one who would worry about water damage. (We currently are dealing with a pipe that started leaking from our upstairs tub down to the living room ceiling below, so this is utmost on my mind!)
Anonymous wrote:Valuable? I would not pay more or less for a home with a 2nd floor laundry. It really doesn't matter to me. I have 4 kids and the laundry is in the basement.
Basement laundry is not a deal breaker for me. 2nd floor laundry would not push a house that I'm on the fence about into the buy category.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I bought my house because of the 2nd floor laundry room. My favorite thing. So fab.
Me too! Sold me on our home. I overlooked imperfections in our home due to the 2nd story laundry room. I will always want my laundry room on the level where our dirty laundry is accumulated.
I'm curious about the worries about leaking and flooding. We've never had a problem with leaking laundry machines or flooding. We have bathrooms upstairs that would be equally prone to water problems, no?
If we someday have a problem with a leak, the years of convenience will make up for it, IMO. And we have insurance ?
Maybe the people worried about leaks have never had laundry rooms upstairs. To me, not putting the washer and dryer near the dirty laundry would be the euivalent of keeping a stove or refrigerator in the basement. Impractical.
Anonymous wrote:I bought my house because of the 2nd floor laundry room. My favorite thing. So fab.
Anonymous wrote:I actually would prefer it to be on the first level (I don't even mind the basement as long as the space isn't gross). I spend most of my time on the first floor and don't want to be running upstairs every time I need to check on the laundry.