I spoke to the Hausmeister and he’s gonna call someone to come and check it on Monday.
Could the crazy difference between temperatures cause it?
Seems like there was some kind of water ingress (either by you mopping the floor too wet, letting water sit on it or by a broken pipe in the floor) or incorrect installment of the floor. get in contact with your landlord immediately.
Wood works, seems like they didnt keep 0.5 inches space at the ends so the wood can work.
It would have happend in a year anyways. The current weather just made it happen quicker.
Nothing to do with water or whatever.
Water damage you can see it in the floor to the right, boards are separated and twisted. You have rental insurance or liability insurance if it’s your fault? May need to file a claim.
I visited my parents last fall, we were all sitting in the living room when we heard suddenly a series of loud cracks. The tiles in the bathroom had suddenly jumped out of the floor, partly flying a meter, partly they were risen like in your picture.
We were flabbergasted, the tiles were at least 20 years old, the floor beneath was dry, no water damage what so ever, the ground hadn’t shifted, nothing. Called the landlord, they called someone to inspect the damage.
The result: it happens sometimes. Sometimes after 20 years and longer. Call your landlord.
6 comments
That looks like water damage somehow
I spoke to the Hausmeister and he’s gonna call someone to come and check it on Monday.
Could the crazy difference between temperatures cause it?
Seems like there was some kind of water ingress (either by you mopping the floor too wet, letting water sit on it or by a broken pipe in the floor) or incorrect installment of the floor. get in contact with your landlord immediately.
Wood works, seems like they didnt keep 0.5 inches space at the ends so the wood can work.
It would have happend in a year anyways. The current weather just made it happen quicker.
Nothing to do with water or whatever.
Water damage you can see it in the floor to the right, boards are separated and twisted. You have rental insurance or liability insurance if it’s your fault? May need to file a claim.
I visited my parents last fall, we were all sitting in the living room when we heard suddenly a series of loud cracks. The tiles in the bathroom had suddenly jumped out of the floor, partly flying a meter, partly they were risen like in your picture.
We were flabbergasted, the tiles were at least 20 years old, the floor beneath was dry, no water damage what so ever, the ground hadn’t shifted, nothing. Called the landlord, they called someone to inspect the damage.
The result: it happens sometimes. Sometimes after 20 years and longer. Call your landlord.