lidgetaf

Joined: 25 Oct 2006 Posts: 1 Location: Lancashire, United Kingdom Thanked: 0 times
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Posted: Wed Oct 25, 2006 4:35 pm Post Subject: Wood/Tile Flooring Insulation to improve warmth. |
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Hi,
I'm looking to replace cheap worn laminate flooring in my kitchen and dining rooms, a key concern is to try and improve the warmth feeling whilst retainig a the easy to clean/maintain benefits (i.e. not carpets). Both rooms have medium-high usage and have external doors hence potential for muck/damp. I'm thinking ceramic tiles in kitchen and engineered wood or "better" laminate floating floor in dining room. The subfloor is level concrete and I'm wondering what insulation options I have (existing laminate has a very thin roll of green foam plus DPM), height isnt too much of an issue as I'm redoing skirting plus kitchen plinths.
Could I lay polystyrene sheets with plywood over the top then tile, or multiple layers of foam then wood/laminate ?
thanks for any advice. |
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WoodYouLike

Joined: 14 Nov 2004 Posts: 6348 Location: Kent, United Kingdom Thanked: 29 times
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Posted: Thu Oct 26, 2006 8:44 am Post Subject: |
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wood is warm on its own (Melamine Laminate isn't). Extra underlayment only adds to the sound-insulation, not really to the warm-feeling.
Or you could consider cork flooring? Has high thermal insulation value and is also available with a real wood veneer layer. __________________ You buy quality, we'll advise. You buy rubbish, we won't!
We're proud members of the BwfA. |
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