I honestly hadn't even put any thought into the underbelly of the city and how that may come into play in a floating ruin, that makes an interesting point.
I had not decided how far things float, if they just float on until they reach orbit, float until you're eaten, or just float to a glass ceiling of sorts and have to find a way back down.
The original inhabitants of the city are long gone, no one stuck around very long after their homes, shops, and taverns all flipped upside down in the sky.
In the timeline of things, I'd say it happened likely a century or so before the start of the current era in the setting, so it has been that way for a while.
I suppose rain water could still pool in the floating masses and provide the occasional trickle of water from above, wells or water lines though would be cut off from water supplies.
I'm picturing ruins kinda like
these only upside down so the buildings and such are pointing at the craters left behind by the city foundations being forcefully lifted. Granted after a century or so the "craters" would now be lakes, if not marshland with scattered deep pits of stagnant water (and who knows what lives in those?)