r/HomeImprovement Feb 17 '20

Contractors just flooded my upstairs while replacing water heater, it’s raining in my kitchen- what to expect next?

So our water heater died this weekend. The repair guys just came over today, and promptly flooded all the water that was inside the old broken water heater onto my upstairs floor (carpeted), and there was so much that it immediately started pouring from my kitchen ceiling out of two hanging light fixtures. It definitely spread quite a bit, because there are two patches in the drywall that were invisible before that are now obvious, and the seams of at least two sheets of drywall are showing/swollen with water. We’ve already put the business’s insurance in touch with our homeowner’s insurance, and my boyfriend does all the IT for this company, so I’m not worried about them trying to screw us over, I’m more just looking to see how long I should except repairs to take, what the potential repairs might be, etc. TYIA!

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u/HumanistPeach Feb 17 '20

I dunno dude. They’re saying there was some sort of faulty valve, but they forgot to turn the water off at the street before starting work, so I’m pretty pissed.

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u/fuku89 Feb 17 '20

Faulty valve? If the valve was faulty, then the heater wouldn’t have stopped draining. And I’m not talking about drip, drip, drip faulty. That doesn’t soak a floor, part of the walls and send water cascading to the floor below.

Incompetence or inattention is to blame.

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u/HumanistPeach Feb 17 '20

I’m thinking that is the case

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u/jhicks0506 Feb 18 '20

If the valve was old (10 years) and hadn't been turned in a couple years or longer, it's possible the valve seal could've become damaged when the valve was turned. It has happened to me before. However it is definitely more likely it was their error.

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u/HumanistPeach Feb 18 '20

Eh, the water heater was 14 years old, and given how little maintenance it turns out the previous owners did, it’s very possible that is what happened. Either way, they’re super embarrassed and have been pretty great so far, and they’ll be back first thing tomorrow to keep working

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u/[deleted] Feb 18 '20

[deleted]

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u/HumanistPeach Feb 18 '20 edited Feb 18 '20

MAKE SURE THEY TURN THE WATER OFF AT THE STREET!! Lol good luck! Things are looking much less disastrous this morning, we might not even need to replace the ceiling!

ETA a very important “not” lol

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u/[deleted] Feb 18 '20

[deleted]

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u/HumanistPeach Feb 18 '20

Thanks so much!