Complete Basement Disaster

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kelly778

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Hi everyone. I moved into a new house a few months ago. It has a very spacious, unfinished basement with an unsealed concrete floor. We have old furniture and plastic storage totes down there. My family and I made the horrible mistake of allowing a relative going through a very hard time to stay here for a week with her 2 huge dogs and 4 cats. The cats were all unneautered males. She lied and told us they were neutered before she arrived because she knew we would never allow them here if we knew the truth. I couldn't have the animals upstairs, so they mostly stayed in the basement.

Despite walking the dogs and letting them run around in the yard for hours each day, they still peed and defecated all over the basement. The cats would not use their litter box. Not only did they use my basement floor as a giant litter box, but they sprayed everywhere. I can't even tell what is sprayed on and what isn't at this point. The mix of terrible smells has traveled through out my entire house. It made its way up to the first floor and by the end of the week, reached the 2nd floor where the bedrooms are. I can't even eat in my kitchen because the smell is so intense and nauseating (the basement door is actually in the kitchen). I also don't know how I can ever allow friends and family to visit our home like this without total embarrassment.

So far, we have scrubbed the floor with Pine Sol and wiped down all of the storage totes with soap and water. It has only made a minor improvement. The house was brand new when we moved in and now smells like an animal hoarder has lived here for years. My cats are neutered, extremely clean and well behaved, so I have never dealt with this before.

I've done research on how to tackle the situation, but I've come across so many conflicting suggestions. I purchased a high pressure steam cleaner after reading one article, but according to others, this could actually force the odors deeper into the porous concrete floor. A man in Home Depot suggested that I get a shop vac and use that. I don't want to mistakenly do anything to make the clean up worse or more difficult in the long run.

I'm just freaking out. My entire family is highly sensitive to smells and obsessive about cleanliness. We don't know what to do to restore our home or if it will even be possible to get it back to the way it was before this nightmare occurred. We'd like to be able to deal with this on our own, but if hiring a professional cleaning service is the best way to go, we will come up with the money to do that. I'm also contemplating if I am going to have to throw out EVERYTHING in the basement.

Please...if anyone has ever gone through something like this or has any knowledge to guide me towards the best option, I would appreciate it more than you know. I'm desperate. I just want my house back and I'm prepared to do whatever it takes. Thank you so much to anyone who took the time to read this.
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Welcome to the site and no I have not been there myself. I wood be more suspect of the woods in the basement, as they would be dry and over willing to absorb any liquid sprayed at them.
When we have repair houses after a fire the whole house smells of smoke, before finishing is added the come in a spray a special paint on all the framing and that works well.
 
The wood is probably just extremely dry and soaks up any liquid it is given. Any professional would have the tools to get rid of it. As for a DIY solution, I can't think of one.
 
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Contact your insurance company.
If you have a mortgage, the mortgage holder will be getting nervous if they knew of this so don't tell them (but your insurance company may be obligated to tell them).

Contact Smoke & Fire restoration people.

Sue the responsible parties for your costs - you may be able to get a judgement against what assets they have or garnish their wages.
If you can I'm sure they will be furious. . .and, astounded that they are being held accountable for the actions of their pets.
 
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What you need to get, either buy or rent, is an ozone-generating air purifier. This will actually destroy the odors by oxidizing (and breaking apart) the organic molecules that create the smell. These machines work - a buddy try to sell me one and I tested it on fried fish smell in a closed up home - smell was completely gone in a few hours. I tried an Alpine brand. You will want to run this full blast, preferably when you are not in the home - the ozone slightly irritates your throat. But also, the ozone quickly reacts and disappears very quickly after you turn off the machine, so run it when you are out of the house. See http://www.google.com/search?q=ozone+air+purifier
 
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