Anonymous wrote:Neither, hardwood is not waterproof and tile is really hard on your legs. If you don't plan to cook much at all, either will do. This is when vinyl is great.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Upper Income Bracket = Tile (nice tile, typically European, larger formats are popular now)
Wood floor = suburban, middle class
Don’t shoot the messenger
I think it really depends on the house. It depends on how big the house is and how separated the kitchen and the “family” spaces are from the other spaces. But I also think it varies a lot regionally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Upper Income Bracket = Tile (nice tile, typically European, larger formats are popular now)
Wood floor = suburban, middle class
Don’t shoot the messenger
Not in places like Georgetown or Kalorama. Seeing tiles in the kitchen is very rare in the multimillion dollar houses there. My impression is that people look down on tile in general in this area. I actually mostly only see it in cheaper houses. Are you from the DMV?
Anonymous wrote:Upper Income Bracket = Tile (nice tile, typically European, larger formats are popular now)
Wood floor = suburban, middle class
Don’t shoot the messenger
Anonymous wrote:Upper Income Bracket = Tile (nice tile, typically European, larger formats are popular now)
Wood floor = suburban, middle class
Don’t shoot the messenger
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you do hardwood buy raw wood and have it finished onsite. I think people who are talking about stuff getting between their floorboards have the prefinished wood. You can also opt for engineered (also finished on site). It looks the same as hardwood but is more stable in a most environment.
PP. This is true, our hardwood was prefinished. However, I don't think the gaps between the boards are unique to prefinished boards. It's driven by the shape of the planks.
I can see where some rectangular plank shapes might fit more tightly together. But in general the gaps are related to the workmanship and subfloor design as well.
Regarding stains...in Year 1, I dropped/spilled a cup of hot miso soup and for whatever reason, it permeated the polyurethane and made a stain. This was like a grease stain on light maple plank. I wiped it up immediately.
My experience is that liquids do puddle on the surface but I can see some going down into the small gap if there is a big puddle.
+1 to no pre finished floors. Our past floors did not have gaps and never stained (white oak, walnut, hickory) despite some horrifying spills including red wine, coffee, elderly dog with giardia.
Anonymous wrote:I will follow up with the hardwood guy to ask a few questions about his process to ensure there are no gaps. Thanks again everyone--it's been useful to get feedback on this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you do hardwood buy raw wood and have it finished onsite. I think people who are talking about stuff getting between their floorboards have the prefinished wood. You can also opt for engineered (also finished on site). It looks the same as hardwood but is more stable in a most environment.
PP. This is true, our hardwood was prefinished. However, I don't think the gaps between the boards are unique to prefinished boards. It's driven by the shape of the planks.
I can see where some rectangular plank shapes might fit more tightly together. But in general the gaps are related to the workmanship and subfloor design as well.
Regarding stains...in Year 1, I dropped/spilled a cup of hot miso soup and for whatever reason, it permeated the polyurethane and made a stain. This was like a grease stain on light maple plank. I wiped it up immediately.
My experience is that liquids do puddle on the surface but I can see some going down into the small gap if there is a big puddle.