I've done flooring before. I laid some surprisingly nice vinyl tiles in the upstairs bathroom of the old house before we even moved in, and of course, I did the cork planks in the downstairs bathroom of the old house twice. I even did a combination of the two when I installed vinyl planks in the old laundry room (still really like those - so much so that we're planning on using the same kind in our new laundry room... eventually).
But in the new house, I had my first opportunity to install some hardwood flooring, and - even if I say so myself - I think I did okay.
In the interests of full disclosure, I should probably admit that the stuff we used is engineered hardwood, and not hardwood hardwood, but the installation process is very similar - except for the lack of sanding.
Also in the interests of full disclosure, I should relate the story of how we wound up with the flooring we did, because a) it's interesting, and b) I like to think that SOME people who come to this blog enjoy the posts for the stories, and not just for the pictures. Okay. One person. Sometimes.
Anyway, the story goes that we knew before we moved in that the carpets in the house were terrible and would have to be replaced. We didn't know how terrible some sections were, as opposed to others, or we might have done things in a different order, but whatever. Our first priority at that point was to get the carpet out of the living room, dining room, and front hall, and maybe even cover up the hideous linoleum in the kitchen.
We knew this was going to be a HUGE job, however, and given that we were moving, and it was Christmas time, and we were going to do all the demo and prep work ourselves, and I'm kinda lazy anyway, we decided to hire a contractor to do it for us. We had a little money available from the sale of the old house that we kept back from the down payment for the new house specifically for this reason, so that part was covered. Then my buddy Mark had a good recommendation for a contractor and he was even available to work more or less at the time we needed him, so that part was covered, too. All we had to do was go pick out some flooring.
Well, we hied ourselves off to Pacific Coast Floor Coverings (eventually, after a couple of disappointing stops at other stores) and managed to find something we really liked: the Elements by Kentwood Maple Saffron. Well, we plunked down our money (a rather large amount of it, actually), and a week later I made two trips out to Langford to pick it up. I had to make two trips because it was a metric butt-load of flooring (which is roughly half of a metric shit-ton, or 1.69 imperial butt-loads), and our little pickup wouldn't handle the whole load in one shot.
So we were all set to go when Mike (the contractor) showed up and let us in on one teensy weensy little problem. See, we needed a floating floor because we were installing it over a slab, and didn't want to install a subfloor (and the roughly 750,000 tapcons that would require).
The Elements by Kentwood Maple Saffron flooring is rated for nail down, glue down, or float installation. The problem with the Elements by Kentwood Maple Saffron flooring is that it's also tongue-in-groove. See?
The fact that it's T&G means that, in order to float the floor, you have to glue all of the joints. Which means every tongue, and every groove, must be glued, or the joints will separate. Which means that the installation would take approximately three times as long, and cost approximately three times as much. And THAT was not in our budget.
So there we were: 6:30pm on a Friday night, a week before Christmas, and our contractor telling us that the $5000 worth of Elements by Kentwood Maple Saffron flooring we just bought was no damn good.
Well... shit.
So we did what any self-respecting home owners do when confronted with the fact they spent a metric butt-load of money on product they can't use.
We drove to Home Depot.
Okay, FIRST, we had a little discussion about what to do with the $5000 worth of Elements by Kentwood Maple Saffron flooring sitting in the living room. Once we decided that the Elements by Kentwood Maple Saffron would actually look really good in the bedrooms upstairs and that, yes, we had enough of it to do all three, THEN we went to Home Depot.
Okay, so FIRST we actually went to Rona and another crappy hardware store that didn't have a) anything we liked or b) enough in stock of the flooring we DID like, but THEN we found ourselves at Home Depot (at 8:30 on a Friday night), looking at not only a different brand of flooring, but a different color and a different species of wood. Specifically, the Trillium Imperial Walnut Uniclic Engineered Flooring. This product held our interest for one specific reason: the patented Uniclic technology; look ma, no glue!
So we bought $4000 worth of Trillium Imperial blah de blah, screw it: the flooring. I went back the next morning, rented the Home Depot van and brought it all back in one fell swoop (cause I don't really care about the Home Depot van's shocks).
I wish I had a picture of $9000+ worth of flooring sitting in our living room, but I completely failed to take a shot of it. It was damn impressive.
We spent the rest of the weekend finishing the demo, grinding off the nail heads still stuck in the concrete from when we pulled up the carpet tack strips, and generally getting it ready for the guys to lay the flooring. Of course, we found some unexpected things, like the way the stairs, once we took the carpet off, were amazingly poorly constructed, and would need some reworking:
A bow that big is going to make laying floor across the top something of... well, an impossibility. There was also the giant crack in the hallway floor:
But Mike assured us it wasn't anything he couldn't handle and so we turned over a key to the house, locked the kitties in the upstairs bedroom and went off to work.
Well, they didn't finish it by Christmas - it took them a couple of extra days in January - but they did it, and they did a better job in less time than we would have. They also said that the flooring was some of the nicest material they had worked with. It snapped together really easily, and held tight. It also came in thirteen (13!) different lengths, which made it easy to avoid getting a repeating pattern. And it looks, even if I say so, fabulous:
Mike himself undertook the huge job of covering the stairs:
Which is covered up so we could paint it... The sad part is that we STILL haven't quite finished the rest of the trim.
So, next time: I actually get to the part where I'm installing the Elements by Kentwood Maple Saffron engineered hardwood flooring! (Unless I take a slight detour to cover how to remove a popcorn ceiling, of course.)
And now, a return to This Week in Mayonnaise!
Apparently, last week's inaugural edition of This Week In Mayonnaise met with some criticism - from the War Department, who insisted that I posted a picture of the wrong side of the Mayo Lion on the front of the garage. Far be it from ME to disappoint the War Department (deliberately, at least), so here is the other side of the thing which, I must admit, highlights the deficiencies in using mayonnaise to adhere AND seal an exterior decoration:
(Don't hesitate to click any of these for a higher-resolution picture, by the way.)
Oh, and as a bonus, here's a close up of the nails at the bottom that are, yes indeed, coming out from the inside of the garage:
Yeah. Really. I think I said it best when I first noticed them, actually. As I recall, I turned to Amy and said, "Buh?"
7 comments:
That is some pretty wood.
And I, for one, appreciate the conversion formula for metric buttload. That will come in handy.
I'd like a conversion to metric shit-tonne, please.
looks lovely. :) But you still haven't told us which light fixture won most hideous. :)
Yes, I did.
So, was it actually pretty easy to install yourself? I'm thinking of a Trillium Uniclick for my upstairs bedrooms and hallway.
Uh, we didn't actually install it ourselves... We hired somebody.
That being said, it certainly LOOKED easy.
We DID use the bullnose and not only was it really expensive, but it didn't have the same connection mechanism as the flooring AND it wasn't even the same wood!
In fact, we wound up painting the bullnose pieces in a darker color to match the trim around the mantel and the slate hearth. It looks sharp, but sanding and painting that expensive bullnose was not easy to do.
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