Ohio_Frustrated
Junior Member
We recently had severe water damage where a second floor toilet overflowed and the water ran out of the bowl overnight (about 5 hours). They considered this category 3 or black water and have gutted most of my house!
However, now that we are choosing the replacement parts, I am a bit confused as to how the insurance company determines what to replace it with. I was told they use a company to determine the quality of my flooring (vinyl and carpet) and countertops. But when it came to choosing my kitchen cabinets I was told that my solid wood cabinets were the "standard" for the time when the house was built (1968) and they want to replace them with the cheapest builder grade, furniture board cabinets available. Does this sound right? We are the second owners of the home and almost everything in the house was an upgrade when it was built, I can't imagine that my 3/4" solid wood cabinets were the "standard".
Also, our walls were plaster over the metal mesh. They want to replace with regular drywall. I have since read that plaster is less messy when it is being put up, structurally stronger, and noise reducing. Can I insist that they put this back the way it was or do I have to accept drywall since that is how they do it today?
I've been looking into a public insurance adjuster and think that I might have to resort to that. I hate to pay the extra money with all that we have already lost but I do want my home put back together the same quality that it was!
Any help or advice would be greatly appreciated!
Frustated - in - Ohio!
However, now that we are choosing the replacement parts, I am a bit confused as to how the insurance company determines what to replace it with. I was told they use a company to determine the quality of my flooring (vinyl and carpet) and countertops. But when it came to choosing my kitchen cabinets I was told that my solid wood cabinets were the "standard" for the time when the house was built (1968) and they want to replace them with the cheapest builder grade, furniture board cabinets available. Does this sound right? We are the second owners of the home and almost everything in the house was an upgrade when it was built, I can't imagine that my 3/4" solid wood cabinets were the "standard".
Also, our walls were plaster over the metal mesh. They want to replace with regular drywall. I have since read that plaster is less messy when it is being put up, structurally stronger, and noise reducing. Can I insist that they put this back the way it was or do I have to accept drywall since that is how they do it today?
I've been looking into a public insurance adjuster and think that I might have to resort to that. I hate to pay the extra money with all that we have already lost but I do want my home put back together the same quality that it was!
Any help or advice would be greatly appreciated!
Frustated - in - Ohio!