Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:we are going to redo a kitchen in a house we just bought. The rest of the house has hardwood floors, except the kitchen. Existing flooring is vinyl which we are obviously going to replace. The question is whether to extend the hardwood floors into the kitchen or install a high-end ceramic tile. I like the look of hardwood floors in the kitchen but I tend to think that ceramic tile may be more practical for cleaning and heavy traffic. From all the rooms in the house I think the kitchen is the room with the highest traffic. Prefinished hardwood floors may be more resilient but I don't like the look, I'd rather have the floors finished onsite.
Do you have hardwood floors in the kitchen and wished you had something different, such as tiles? or is there any other flooring material that we should consider (not vinyl)?
thanks for your advise
Have you looked at high-end vinyl tile? I looks like ceramic tile and can be set with grout lines so it is almost indistinguishable from ceramic.
Anonymous wrote:we are going to redo a kitchen in a house we just bought. The rest of the house has hardwood floors, except the kitchen. Existing flooring is vinyl which we are obviously going to replace. The question is whether to extend the hardwood floors into the kitchen or install a high-end ceramic tile. I like the look of hardwood floors in the kitchen but I tend to think that ceramic tile may be more practical for cleaning and heavy traffic. From all the rooms in the house I think the kitchen is the room with the highest traffic. Prefinished hardwood floors may be more resilient but I don't like the look, I'd rather have the floors finished onsite.
Do you have hardwood floors in the kitchen and wished you had something different, such as tiles? or is there any other flooring material that we should consider (not vinyl)?
thanks for your advise
Anonymous wrote:I love Marmoleum--I think it looks cool and feels great on the feet. My parents' Marmoleum floor has started to peel up a bit, though.
We did hardwood in our kitchen mostly so it would blend in with the rest of the house, which it does. And it has held up fine. I kind of like the dings and scratches. I don't like a super-new looking wood floor.
Anonymous wrote:Reviving this thread. We're looking at a new construction townhouse with an open floor plan on main level. I'm scared of water damage in the kitchen, but I think it will look weird to have ceramic break up the floor. The kitchen is in between the living room and the dining room.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know I'll be in the minority, but I like ceramic tile in a kitchen. If it's a very open floor plan I'd keep the floor continuous with wood, but otherwise I'd go for ceramic.
same
I love ceramic.
Anonymous wrote:I know I'll be in the minority, but I like ceramic tile in a kitchen. If it's a very open floor plan I'd keep the floor continuous with wood, but otherwise I'd go for ceramic.