View Single Post
  #1   Report Post  
Steve Atty
 
Posts: n/a
Default Kitchen floor situation

I'm in the middle of re-doing my kitchen and having coped with some
lousy wiring (cables running diagonally across the walls, cables
sitting in channels in the wall but not plastered in behind kitchen
units, cooker spur not actually having the earths connected etc I
decided to look at the floor.

The previous owners put in the kitchen units and then put the wooden
block flooring in round them stopping about 1 inch under the front of
the units. Our new kitchen units are different widths so the gaps in
the flooring dont lline up and in some areas (like where the cooker
was) there is no wooden flooring at all with the old 1971 vinyl tiles
being exposed.

The floor in other places is pretty grotty so we have decided that it
has to come up and that is where the fun begins: Lifting up some of
the wooden block tiles (which seem to be bonded together in 4 inch
squares with metal staples also holding together) I find that they
have been stuck to the floor with bitumen. However the bitumen seems
to be on a thin concrete screed (2-3mm max) which in some places is
lifting up with the bitumen revealing the original concrete floor
(along with signs of the original glue used to bond the vinyl tiles in
place.. yes thats right : under the main part of the floor the vinyl
has been removed but not under the back of the cupboards). Obviously
the floor was already sealed with the old tile glue simply adding to
the seal and so the concrete screed has not bonded to it properly.

I'm planning on putting down some standard size laminate boarding with
the thin foam layer underlay so do I:

1) Attempt to remove all the bitumen/screeding and get the floor as
smooth as possible
2) Where it comes up it comes up and I should fill in the gaps with
another bitumen style sealer
3) Just seal the floor with a general water proof sealer having
smoothed off the edges of any of the holes in the screed

Steve


--

This product may contain nuts.

Totally frivolous website : http://www.tty.org.uk