Floors deserve your valuable attention. It’s an element in the room that highlights and complements, and the flooring used can make or break the living space. The ground after all is where all else is built.
Wood flooring is one the best flooring options for homeowners because of its durability, aesthetic, relatively low maintenance and character it lends a room. Solid wood floors are typically used but the advent of engineered hardwood floor, first introduced in the 80s, has been catching on. A more affordable option it’s constructed of laminated wood layers in different wood species wrapped in a top layer of hardwood veneer. This layered construction provides this floor type a great deal of toughness and durability.
Humid Proof
The structure of the engineered wood floor is resistant to moisture. It is made to withstand high humidity and dampness that solid wood is incapable of taking in so the flooring is ideal to regions or places in the country that have higher humidity levels and those areas in the house that have higher moisture levels (like the basement). Engineered hardwood flooring does not contract and expand in relation to changes in humidity like its hardwood counterpart, making it a valuable choice in homes and commercial spaces. Steve Bunch, director of sales for Columbia Flooring, states that the popularity of this flooring has tremendously grown during the past 15 years. The flooring allows the beauty of hardwood to shine through and that it poses less problems against humidity.
A Green Route
The process in making a single wood demands more from the environment than the manufacturing of engineered hardwood. Because its easier to maintain and more durable also means longer lifespan in the home and less energy and resources are wasted on its repair and upkeep.
Place and Price
The installation of engineered wood flooring requires few carpentry tools. It is placed on a floating system that is easy to install and complete, much similar to installing other wood flooring. The cost of engineered flooring is less as opposed to other floor types and it typically runs from $2 to $5 per square foot. Suppliers offer a variety of selection from birch to nutmeg and so forth.
The engineered wood floor offers plenty of benefits and the only drawback of the floor type is that it only allows refinishing twice or thrice because of its layered construction. In a nutshell, the quality scale of the engineered wood flooring is somewhere between the laminate flooring and the genuine solid wood flooring and the flooring can certainly last more than it’s worth.