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R.K. & Associates Design & General Contracting Kitchen Flooring Options: Pros/Cons/Costs
WOOD PRODUCTS The wood category has grown to include flooring products referred to as engineered wood and prefinished flooring. The cost is moderate, and a wood floor is a resale plus. However, be aware that wood flooring in high traffic areas requires more frequent refinishing than would be necessary in a lower traffic area, which could be problematic over time. If you do go for a wood floor in the kitchen, make sure you choose the correct one for your needs. SOLID WOOD Solid means the same
piece of wood, and nothing but that wood, for the entire thickness of the
floorboard. A typical wood floorboard is 3/4" thick and 2
1/4" wide, with a tongue-and-groove profile to make it interlock. Red and
white oak still rule, together comprising more than 90% of all of the solid
hardwood flooring installed nowadays. But plenty of other species are well
suited to kitchen flooring, such as ash, maple, beech and cherry. Beyond regular sweeping and vacuuming, the floor’s finish dictates
maintenance specifics. A practical choice for this hard-traveled floor is
multiple coats of a water-based urethane finish. A solid-wood floor can last the
life of the structure. ENGINEERED Engineered wood flooring is a
laminated product with three to five layers. The top layer is clear, top-quality
wood. It represents a growing percentage of the flooring market, and it often is
sold prefinished. Every major manufacturer has several product offerings,
combining different features, price points and warranties. Engineered wood is
more dimensionally stable than solid wood. So if your kitchen is in a
potentially damp location, such as a room below grade, consider using engineered
instead of solid-wood flooring. I nstallations used to require that planks be glued together. Now 20% of the laminate-flooring products in this market are glueless: They snap together with clever locking mechanisms tight enough to keep out liquids.Even systems requiring glue use it only to adhere one tongue-and-groove plank to another, never to the subfloor. A laminate kitchen floor is meant to float atop the subfloor, not be glued or nailed to it. Some manufacturers produce several quality levels. Get the best you can for your kitchen. PROS: Easy, quick installation, portable, no damage to substrate, low to moderate cost, comfortable underfoot, no fading or yellowing, scratch resistant, simple maintenance, damaged planks can be replaced CONS: Limited style choices, no refinishing, can dent, fiberboard core problematic for some allergies VINYL
Vinyl flooring, which bounded into homes in the 1960s, works great in the
kitchen and remains a popular choice today. Inlaid patterns are consistent
throughout the thickness of the material. They last longer than those patterns
printed on the top surface only (rotogravure), which can wear off. So inlaid
costs more. TILE: CERAMIC & STONE CERAMIC The Porcelain Enamel Institute groups tiles in categories (I to IV+), indicating increasing durability. Durability is a function of a tile’s hardness, and of the sheen and color of any glaze. (Light-color glazes are more durable than dark, for example.) Kitchens usually need a group III or higher tile. Choose a tile with good slip resistance. Unglazed tiles are less slippery than glazed tiles. Any tile with a slightly textured surface provides greater traction than a smooth tile. The texture shows dirt less; too much texture, however, inhibits cleaning. Tiles that mimic stone in their texture and have mottled coloration are popular now. Many of these tiles are porcelain products, fired at temperatures so high that they are vitreous. This process renders them harder than the slate, granite, marble or limestone they resemble. They are extremely dense and absorb little water, meaning you can continue your kitchen flooring outside the house. And these tiles are made in sizes larger than previous standards, up to 18 in. sq. The larger the tile, the more expansive your kitchen space reads. Care/maintenance: Follow the manufacturers’ specs regarding sealer (type and frequency of application) on the tile you select. Use the recommended grout and seal it. Clean with diluted household cleanser and hot water; rinse thoroughly. STONE If you value an original more than a copy, consider stone: granite,
limestone, slate, soapstone. Stone retains heat, making a stone floor a fine
installation over radiant heat or in passive-solar situations. We know it’s
durable, and it is low maintenance. Seal any stone except soapstone. A stone supplier can recommend the best sealer. Maintain your floor with a pH-neutral cleaner but nothing that leaves a soap film, which traps dirt. PROS Durability and hardness, enormous variety, simple care, environmentally friendly, no staining or fading, good over radiant heat, moderate cost CONS Less comfortable underfoot, hardness means breakage of dropped items, cold, noisy, grout can stain or crack CORK Cork originates from a natural source not endangered by its harvesting. Cork tiles are made of the bark of the cork oak tree, bark that can be peeled off every decade (the trees live to be 150 years old). Frank Lloyd Wright liked cork, and he installed it in houses where it endures today. Contemporary cork floors now are sealed with UV-cured acrylic or water-based urethane sealers. Neither water nor oil penetrates the sealer. What’s more, you literally are walking on air: Cork tiles contain 200 million air cells per cu. in. Traditionally, cork floors have been made from 12-in. sq. tiles, up to 5/16 in. thick, in the familiar honey color. Those tiles are still available, but manufacturers have broadened their offerings. Because of cork’s thirsty, expansionist tendencies, moisture is the crucial concern. In areas with wide variations in humidity, experts recommend installing cork floors at the driest time of year. After installation, cork floors should be finished with the manufacturer’s recommended sealer to ensure that the edges of the tiles or planks are sealed thoroughly. To keep them clean, damp-mop water-based urethane finishes with a water-and-vinegar solution. PROS Resilient, less
breakage of dropped items, comfortable underfoot, warm, “green” material,
durable, moderate cost, sound and thermal insulator, hypoallergenic, simple care
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Last modified: 02/03/06
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