Destructive Party - Experienced Advice Only Please
Question Posted Tuesday February 6 2007, 1:20 am
18/F
I'm throwing a party next week and I've decided to make it a dance party because whenever my friends and I go to parties, we end up dancing anyway. So I'm all ready, I have trance and hip hop music and a strobe light. I'm inviting about 80 people. I'll probably have about 40 to 50 on the dance floor at a time.
I have a three-floored house. The living room is about a carpeted 13'5"x15'5" room that's on the middle floor and takes up two floors (the second floor is open to below). My house was built in 1999, we bought it new and it's made of wood (whatever they use in British Columbia). Right underneath the room, the basement is unfinished and I have an unfinished toilet and an unfinished bedroom. The ceiling isn't done and all you can see is wood beams and flat wood. The wall for the toilet goes right in the middle of the area beneath my basement and it's unfinished also but it might be holding up that area of the house up? I don't know...
Here is my question: With fourty odd teenagers dancing in my living room, what am I looking at here in terms of my living room floor caving it to the basement.
I don't know anything about construction and I'm giving all the information that I have, please tell me if you need more.
And people who don't know construction, as much as I appreciate your advice, I've been getting mixed answers from everyone so I already know what the average joe thinks, I just need to see if its actually plausible.
Thank you!
Attention: NOTHING on this site may be reproduced in any fashion whatsoever without explicit consent (in writing) of the owner of said material, unless otherwise stated on the page where the content originated. Search engines are free to index and cache our content. Users who post their account names or personal information in their questions have no expectation of privacy beyond that point for anything they disclose. Questions are otherwise considered anonymous to the general public.