Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Apologies if this has already been discussed to death, but we're having a house refurb and I'm considering putting engineered wood floor in our open plan kitchen/dining/play/living area. I just love the look of it but I know it's not the most practical choice with 1 toddler and baby on its way. If you have it, would you recommend it? Ps we have underfloor heating


Thank you!

We have engineered wood with underfloor heating. It is so lovely walking on a warm floor :). I love the wood too. Why don't you think it is practical? Ours is oak, but one thing that did surprise me is that our pale oak has developed an orange tinge in the sunlight. I don't know if you can find out, but it might be worth finding out what will happen when the sun hits your wood (engineered or otherwise).
We have engineered oak floorboards in our kitchen and I do love it but the section in front of the hob is very stained. I think possibly that we choose a wood finish that doesn't repel liquids very well. A drop of water immediately sinks into the wood but we had a wooden bathroom floor in our previous house and water sat on top of the wood without any sign of being absorbed. I would go with wood again but be a bit more careful about the finish. We have underfloor heating and it is lovely. We have a high gloss white kitchen and the wooden floor complements it beautifully.
We have it, not sure if it's engineered or not, but it's pretty dark so doesn't show dirt etc noticeably at all. the denting /marking thing is more of an issue in the sitting room area, but that's more down to us being careless and/or not using those felt pads under chair legs etc.
Choose oiler finish and a dark ish finish with lots of natural grain and the marks really don't show! We have the same boards throughout the house, including bathrooms and bedrooms. For bathroom floors, we did an extra layer of Danish pop for added protection (very easy to do) and love it.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • That said, organised displays could be on Saturday before and after and the actual day, and private ones could just not have the loud ones.  It’s all down to accessibility and people caring/not caring
    • The problem this year is that 5th November falls on a Wednesday. So some places will be bringing their "bonfire night" forward to Saturday 1st and some will be knocking it back to Saturday 8th and there'll probably be a few that just go with Wednesday 5th anyway. If you're doing a public display, having it on a weekend gets more crowds. Which basically means a solid week of fireworks.
    • Fireworks in this area do feel totally incessant at this time of year, almost every evening there is terrible noise. I feel great concern for wildlife, pets (I have a senior cat who hates them), as well as people who struggle with PTSD etc. Last year I even had people setting them off in front of my home. Tonight and yesterday evening have been particularly bad. Is there anything we can do as a community to prevent this? What action can we take? Surely we shouldn’t be expected to just put up with it every year for weeks on end! 
    • Does anyone know what time tonight's events, the second night of the new phenomenon of Halloween Fireworks, end? These do sound too major to be anything but large- scale organised events and they are loud, very loud. So anyone, for their own reasons, that dislikes or objects to this level of noise for the next x amount of hours, really has no choice in the matter! Could those addicted to loud bangs possibly have a kind of silent disco setup with the bangs sent through headphones, so the rest of us could be spared?
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...