Hello Forum,
I have completely removed my driveway and also took out the concrete floor around the basement stairs. Underneath, I found a heavily damaged concrete foundation on which the basement stair tiles were installed. Some of the upper tiles no longer have proper support and are loose. I think this is going to be a major headache and won’t be cheap.
Now to my question:
What kind of costs should I roughly expect for repairing such a problem?
And is it a big job?
I understand it’s hard to answer this in general, but I would at least like to get a rough idea of the price range I might be dealing with.
Thank you in advance!
Best regards


I have completely removed my driveway and also took out the concrete floor around the basement stairs. Underneath, I found a heavily damaged concrete foundation on which the basement stair tiles were installed. Some of the upper tiles no longer have proper support and are loose. I think this is going to be a major headache and won’t be cheap.
Now to my question:
What kind of costs should I roughly expect for repairing such a problem?
And is it a big job?
I understand it’s hard to answer this in general, but I would at least like to get a rough idea of the price range I might be dealing with.
Thank you in advance!
Best regards
Did you chip out the wall section yourself? Maybe you could describe your approach and what the actual goal of the "slipped rotary hammer operation" was. I still don’t quite understand exactly what the outcome was, meaning the combination of the poor condition and the significantly botched repair attempt.
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H
Haus_käufer28 Oct 2021 19:2611ant schrieb:
Did you remove that section of the wall yourself? Maybe you could describe your approach and what the actual goal of the "slipped rotary hammer operation" was supposed to be. I’m still having a hard time picturing exactly what the outcome was—what combination of a poor condition and a badly handled repair attempt led to this. Look, I removed the asphalt, which went up to the first corner of the staircase. From the other corner, a thinner concrete slab started. This was relatively easy to break up. I didn’t damage the concrete under the tile; it was already deteriorated before. It only became visible after I removed the surrounding floor. You could also see why the tiles had lost their grip. I didn’t break anything—it was already like that.