Hello everyone,
we are currently looking for a suitable flooring and have come across almost everything available on the market.
Solid wood parquet and laminate were quickly ruled out for various reasons.
Right now, vinyl is very popular, but of course, there are concerns about harmful substances and the quality of the surface feel.
Recently, we were offered the Disano design flooring by Haro, which is said to have the positive qualities of vinyl flooring but without any harmful substances, and to have a very appealing tactile feel.
Is there anyone who has this flooring, knows about it, or has given it more detailed consideration and can perhaps make comparisons to other products?
Thanks everyone.
Best regards
we are currently looking for a suitable flooring and have come across almost everything available on the market.
Solid wood parquet and laminate were quickly ruled out for various reasons.
Right now, vinyl is very popular, but of course, there are concerns about harmful substances and the quality of the surface feel.
Recently, we were offered the Disano design flooring by Haro, which is said to have the positive qualities of vinyl flooring but without any harmful substances, and to have a very appealing tactile feel.
Is there anyone who has this flooring, knows about it, or has given it more detailed consideration and can perhaps make comparisons to other products?
Thanks everyone.
Best regards
I just looked it up. For this price, we can get high-quality hardwood flooring from a major distributor in Frankfurt, which will be custom-made for our living area according to our specifications. Since we are installing hardwood flooring throughout almost the entire house, including the basement, the price for the complete package was really good.
We took a look at the Disano flooring, but I can’t really tell the difference in surface quality compared to laminate, and laminate is cheaper. I like the Designflooring Premium Tecara DD 350 S by Meister and the Purline Biofloor 1000 by Wineo. The surfaces of these floors feel softer and have a more matte finish; the one from Meister is truly matte.
Best regards,
Sabine
Best regards,
Sabine
I’m not sure if your question is also addressing this, but a salesperson told us that design flooring is better for children’s rooms than vinyl (due to harmful substances; even if they are minimal, you might still wonder in case of illness whether the floor contributed to it...).
However, it is not suitable for bathrooms, where “regular” vinyl is necessary because of the moisture.
This is a general statement – whether this also applies to Haro flooring in bathrooms, you would need to verify yourselves.
However, it is not suitable for bathrooms, where “regular” vinyl is necessary because of the moisture.
This is a general statement – whether this also applies to Haro flooring in bathrooms, you would need to verify yourselves.
Nordlys schrieb:
I think they’re just trying to confuse us. Every design floor is vinyl-based, polyvinyl chloride. They all avoid the abbreviation PVC like the devil avoids holy water. Every one needs plasticizers. There’s always some in it. Right? KarstenThe mentioned floors are all PVC-free.
Best regards,
Sabine
Similar topics