Concrete flooring in bedrooms?
j_smallwood
6 years ago
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j_smallwood
6 years agoRelated Discussions
Engineered timber floors, uneven concrete floor, kitchen installation
Comments (6)Hi I am in flooring The floor does not have to be water level you have a allowance of 3mm in 1mt or 6mm it 2mt or 9mm in 3mt get the picture The subfloor does have to be hard and smooth But you CAN NOT put the kitchen on the floating floor, the floating floor needs to be able to expand and contract with a min of 10 mm expansion or 1.5mm for every 1mt so a 10mt long room needs 15 mm expansion gap at ether end. Ask the kitchen supplier if he can leave the kick boards of a put them on are the floor is installed...See More!960s beach house reno - painting concrete floors.
Comments (2)A beach shack? Lucky you! You can't really go wrong with USA or any shade of white. If it is only a temporary floor or even if it isn't, really have some fun with it, the palest blue tones will suit the setting but funky bright yellows and orange are a great summery feel unless you want the Hamptons look where you paint the floors in either white or grey or both depending on the room....See MoreCovering concrete slab- carpet in the bedrooms + timber boards
Comments (3)We have a new house, one level, and the tile, carpet and timber work well together. The tile is pretty seamless with the wood, and there's only a small bit of transition strip or whatever it's called between carpet and wood or tile. Nothing that would stop a wheelchair. I think the issue is to make sure that the base is level: good tradies should do the rest....See MoreRemodelling an existing bathroom in a 1st floor concrete slab
Comments (18)Few things 1. Still not enough space in the store for a bathrub. 2. I will loose the storage space, storage is very important with growing kids, this way i will have a nice big store room to store. 3. Cost and risk - to run drain i need to cut a lot of concrete and you dont know if there are beams underneath, cutting the concrete slab all the way to store is like cutting the the house by half. There is same risk involved when i remove that single brick wall for the new bathroom,. but i am planning to do another wall first then remove this. 4. Upstairs bathroom is big enough to accommodate all - its a 2030 x 3600 in size 5. The hot and cold water coming behind the wall(bedroom1) where i put the new bathrooms, so just need to drill it through the brick. I know either way i have to cut a lot, one is to cut the concrete slab, other is to remove a brick wall. I thought about putting one outside, but then i have to involve a surveyor, council etc. to much time consuming that way....See Morej_smallwood
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