Anonymous wrote:The quality of it is much improved—it’s no longer cheap flooring that one should only consider for a basement. That said, it’s builder grade—it’s fine, but it’s what I’d put in a rental, not my dream home.
Anonymous wrote:It’s marketing 100% to call this “luxury.” I would never willingly install it anywhere other than a basement or similar area.
Anonymous wrote:We have in it our basement, but OP, I’ve seen it a lot more theses days. Friend just remodeled her $1.5 m house recently and got lvp throughout. A lot of new builds from nv homes and their ilk come with lvp. I don’t think a lot of people choose to upgrade. This is one place where dcum opinion doesn’t reflect market reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No way. I have never installed LVP flooring outside of basements and i am not a luxury everything type of person.
Over the past 15 years as I moved up the property ladder: In my 350K apartment i put hardwood floors, in my 650k bungalow I put tile (lower level couldnt put hardwood floors) or hardwood floors. In my 1.5M$ house i put hardwood floors everywhere (to replace upstairs carpet) and LVP in a prone to humidity basement because tile would have been too cold.
When i see LVP flooring i think cheap/plastiquy and second rate option. Equivalent of laminate countertop.
Exactly. Even in a basement I would do tile and area rugs over it. Never LVP. Plus it off-gassed for ages. Not healthy for pets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's waterproof, doesn't warp, and its very nontoxic and green these days
Tile also is all of those things.
Anonymous wrote:It seems like every spec house/new "luxury" townhouse these days in this area under let's say $2.7M comes with LVP floors. Has LVP come that far and are people happy with it in not-inexpensive homes?
Anonymous wrote:It's the flooring of choice in basements, no matter how expensive the home is. It's 100% waterproof, very durable, and insulates over cold concrete. IT's ideal where there's any chance at all of moisture, humidity, or minor flooding. It also feels good underfoot, especially when installed as a floating floor.
Anonymous wrote:It seems like every spec house/new "luxury" townhouse these days in this area under let's say $2.7M comes with LVP floors. Has LVP come that far and are people happy with it in not-inexpensive homes?
Anonymous wrote:No way. I have never installed LVP flooring outside of basements and i am not a luxury everything type of person.
Over the past 15 years as I moved up the property ladder: In my 350K apartment i put hardwood floors, in my 650k bungalow I put tile (lower level couldnt put hardwood floors) or hardwood floors. In my 1.5M$ house i put hardwood floors everywhere (to replace upstairs carpet) and LVP in a prone to humidity basement because tile would have been too cold.
When i see LVP flooring i think cheap/plastiquy and second rate option. Equivalent of laminate countertop.