11ant
2020-04-17 14:18:34
- #1
If that was planned, then one could easily have the big mouth with the quality :-(Now the company is insolvent...
If that was planned, then one could easily have the big mouth with the quality :-(Now the company is insolvent...
Are you sure it is about a constructiondeveloper – that is, a seller of a bundle of land and house? – I wonder then why you are interested in the construction service description concerning the warranty of his contractor.
Are tiles really spelled with Eszett in the construction service description?
The expert is really taking quite a risk there. With a botched strip, you can visually create a crack-free transition between solid and drywall, but this is neither a recognized rule of technology nor everyone’s preference. I have yet to see a new building without settlement cracks at the joints between drywall/solid or floor/base tiles. Following the advice of our expert + BU, we only had the joint between the floor and base tiles done after about 1 year, so that the floor structure could settle properly. You will hardly get any BU warranty on drying or settlement cracks or due to differing material expansions.
I’ll put it bluntly, your building surveyor, if he criticizes the construction joint and settlement cracks between different materials, is a plum.
Because your questions are more fitting for a builder than for the buyer of a house yet to be built on a currently still foreign plot of land. Furthermore, the proportion of questioners here who lump BT and GU together is even higher than that of clerics who mispronounce "Diözese".How do you come to the conclusion that I am not sure here?