ᐅ What type of flooring do you have or are you planning to install?
Created on: 7 Oct 2015 16:29
W
WildThing
Hello Forum,
I’m curious to see how the "flooring preferences" are distributed here in our forum. You have the option to select up to 4 types of flooring.
It would also be great if you could briefly mention the rooms and the type of flooring in your post.
For example:
Kitchen = tiles
Bathroom = tiles
Living room = hardwood
Children’s room = laminate
I’m curious to see how the "flooring preferences" are distributed here in our forum. You have the option to select up to 4 types of flooring.
It would also be great if you could briefly mention the rooms and the type of flooring in your post.
For example:
Kitchen = tiles
Bathroom = tiles
Living room = hardwood
Children’s room = laminate
B
Baujulchen18 Oct 2015 21:11Bieber0815 schrieb:
Hallway on ground floor, utility room, guest toilet, and bathroom: tiles.
All other rooms: cork (glued down and sealed).This is exactly how we have it at the moment and will probably do the same in the new house.
We had laminate flooring before, and in my opinion, cork feels "warmer" and is also less noisy.
Unfortunately, I can’t recall the manufacturer anymore, it was some time ago.
B
Bieber081519 Oct 2015 22:08Bari schrieb:
If yes, which cork parquet (manufacturer) can you recommend? We chose 4 mm (5/32 inch) thick pre-sealed panels from the manufacturer "KWG." I might be able to say whether they are recommendable after a few years. Another supplier would be Wicanders, although I am more familiar with their ready-to-install planks.
Our glued vinyl is also only 4 mm (0.16 inches) thick.
I once had pre-finished cork parquet in a rental apartment, which was quite decent. It felt nice and warm but, in my opinion, was also very delicate... (As soon as something sharp falls on it, you immediately get a few cork crumbs, although that usually goes unnoticed.)
Do you actually have genuine "bulletin board" cork, or is your design different?
I once had pre-finished cork parquet in a rental apartment, which was quite decent. It felt nice and warm but, in my opinion, was also very delicate... (As soon as something sharp falls on it, you immediately get a few cork crumbs, although that usually goes unnoticed.)
Do you actually have genuine "bulletin board" cork, or is your design different?
B
Bieber081520 Oct 2015 21:40Bari schrieb:
4mm is very thin, though. Tiles are hardly any thicker (if at all, I don’t have any on hand right now). In combination with underfloor heating, the covering should not be too thick. Anyway, 4 mm (0.16 inches) is completely sufficient.
WildThing schrieb:
Do you have real "pinboard" cork, or a different design? We will probably get cork that looks more natural. Just have a look, for example, under kwg-Kork.de/floors/cork/paco/ ... there is practically everything (although in some versions cork only forms the core layer and the surface design is achieved through a coating).
Bieber0815 schrieb:
Tiles are hardly any thicker (if at all, I don’t have any on hand right now). You can’t really generalize like that. Our tiles are between 9 and 11 millimeters (0.35 and 0.43 inches) thick.
Similar topics