Results 1 to 10 of 10
Thread: Kitchen flooring
-
22nd October 2007, 09:06 PM #1Intermediate Member
- Join Date
- Oct 2006
- Location
- Adelaide
- Posts
- 23
Kitchen flooring
Hello to all;
I need some advice please and what better place to ask...
I have totally rebuilt a new kitchen and now I am just about ready to put in my cupboards etc. What I would like to know I have bought the masonite underlay and will be getting the flooring shortly, can I lay the underlay and flooring before I install my cupboards or can I just lay my underlay before the cupboards or must the cupboards etc be put in first then the flooring?
If for any reason the cupboards go in first why?
Many thanks in advance.........
-
23rd October 2007, 08:18 AM #2
Hi There
What sort of flooring?
You can do it either way, however I would lay the flooring forst for a few reasons.
1. It's painful to cut around all the kitchen cabinets, when the room is probably a rectangle.
2. If it's tiles, there is a heap oif wasteage caused by no.1.
3. If you or someone else decides to remodel in a few years it would be really annoying to find there was no floor under tha cabinets.
4. I think the finish looks better if you don't have cut edges around cabinets.
-
23rd October 2007, 09:21 AM #3SENIOR MEMBER
- Join Date
- Apr 2005
- Location
- Sydney
- Age
- 64
- Posts
- 882
Like OBBob, I'd put the floor down first, unless you really want to save the bit that's under the cupboards. You'll get a neater finish and it's easier than cutting around them.
It looks like you're not using tiles though, or you'd be using CTU instead of masonite. It looks like you're using cork or,,,,,,,, lino. :shudder:
-
23rd October 2007, 10:15 AM #4Intermediate Member
- Join Date
- Oct 2006
- Location
- Adelaide
- Posts
- 23
Kitchen flooring
The flooring will probably be good quality lino .looked at a manufacturer called "Kardean".........very good quality and stunning designs and colours. The masonite is going over TG and part old floorboards...and no I dont want to polish the floor as it is only partly floor boards.due to a new addition.
Many thanks again guys
-
24th October 2007, 09:44 PM #5Intermediate Member
- Join Date
- Oct 2006
- Location
- Adelaide
- Posts
- 23
Any more replys?? or thoughts...........
-
25th October 2007, 12:01 AM #6Senior Member
- Join Date
- Dec 2006
- Location
- Outer East - Melbourne
- Posts
- 265
I would go under the cabinets if I was doing it.
Are you using linoleum or vinyl? Forbo make Marmoleum and Artoleum.
www.forbo-flooring.com.au
-
25th October 2007, 12:40 AM #7Intermediate Member
- Join Date
- Oct 2006
- Location
- Adelaide
- Posts
- 23
which ever is the better product..........and good quality
any recommendations?
-
28th October 2007, 02:46 PM #8Senior Member
- Join Date
- Dec 2006
- Location
- Outer East - Melbourne
- Posts
- 265
With linoleum and vinyl, it is not a case of what is the better product. It is your choice.
Linoleum is a floor covering made from solidified linseed oil (linoxyn) in combination with wood flour or cork dust over a burlap or canvas backing.
Vinyl is PVC. Poly Vinyl Chloride based.
Google search and there is a lot of info. Lino is dearer and vinyl is cheaper.
-
28th October 2007, 03:01 PM #9
If you are talking about bulk or roll lino or vinyl, not tiles, then you will be buying the stuff you cutaway around cupboards. All this cutting takes time - lots of it - and there is always the risk that you will cut in the wrong place and have to buy more.......
Plus if you lay to the edges, even with tiles, you have some flexibility to remodel later.
I'd lay the floor first FWIW.
Cheers
Graeme
-
11th November 2007, 09:00 AM #10Intermediate Member
- Join Date
- Aug 2007
- Location
- ACT
- Posts
- 9
Aries - I'm in the same boat as you on this job. I would like to lay the underlay first but need to find out about durability of the material; ie: how long is it acceptable for this to be down before it can be tiled over? In my case it will be a few weeks before I can get back to the tiling.
In addition, I am resheeting the walls of the kitchen so would like the gyprock to be 10mm above the underlay as opposed to the floor boards. Not a biggy - I can just raise the sheet the thickness of underlay + 10mm if wall sheets go on first.
As I am tiling the kitchen, the new room, entrance, laundry and hallway, I will have plenty of cutting of both the underlay and tiles aeround doorways, architraves etc, so I'm thinking a number of cuts around the kitchen cupboards is going to be nothing.
I don't think there is a better way over the other - the main issue relates to how much cutting you actually want to do!
cheers and let us know how you get on.
Similar Threads
-
Kitchen Tiling
By bunats in forum KITCHENSReplies: 10Last Post: 9th July 2007, 12:42 PM -
Advice on wood flooring in a Unit
By mshannon in forum FLOORINGReplies: 5Last Post: 31st May 2006, 09:06 PM -
Kitchen Flooring underlay?
By John99 in forum FLOORINGReplies: 0Last Post: 21st May 2006, 01:03 PM -
Jarrah T&G flooring as kitchen benchtop
By Wildman in forum KITCHENSReplies: 24Last Post: 5th May 2005, 02:24 PM -
kitchen brewing up some questions
By sandant in forum KITCHENSReplies: 6Last Post: 9th November 2004, 04:42 PM
Bookmarks