Hardwood Floors
 Hardwood floors offer the unmistakable charm and
timeless beauty only found in authentic, real wood.
They are never out of fashion and add real value
to the home. Many interior decorators today prefer hard wood floors
as the base layer and then add an area rug to enhance the room's
overall color scheme.
Through advancements in manufacturing of wood floors,
today's hard wood floors are more durable and adaptable to many
different living areas. Engineered wood floors allow homeowners
to use hardwood flooring in areas of the home that they would never
have considered in the past.
Hardwood floors come in a wide variety of wood species,
colors and widths. Besides the classic North American hardwoods
(like red oak, white oak, maple and ash) many manufacturers now
offer exotic hardwood species from all over the World. Exotic hardwoods
give homeowners the chance to better express their own personal
decorating tastes with a more unique looking floor.
Floorscapes of New Mexico hardwood flooring from
today's leading wood floor manufacturers. Names like Mohawk, Mannington,
and Homerwood.
Choosing the Right Type of Wood Flooring
With a little basic understanding about the different types of wood floors you can be better prepared and more confident in your selection. Wood floors are produced in both solid and engineered planks and strips and come in a wide variety of wood species. To help determine which type of floor will work best for your situation depends upon the location within your home and the type of subfloor.
Solid Wood Floors
Solid wood floors are one solid piece of wood and are generally ¾? thick. Mohawk Solid Hardwood Floors are produced from the finest American and Canadian hardwoods includingred & white oak, ash, American cherry, hickory and maple, and are available in several widths. Because solid hardwood floors are more susceptible to moisture than engineered wood floors they should only be installed above grade over approved wooden subfloors and must be nailed-down. Solid wood floors can generally be recoated and refinished several times.
Engineered Wood Floors
These floors are produced by laminating several hardwood plies together to form the planks. Most engineered floors can be glued-down, stapled-down or floated over a variety of subfloors including wood, dry concrete slabs and some types of existing flooring. Engineered hardwood floors have cross-ply construction which reduces the expansion/contraction of planks caused by variations in humidity and allows these floors to be installed anywhere in the home. Mohawk Engineered Hardwood Floors come in a wide variety of widths, thicknesses and colors in both North American and exotic hardwoods.
Exotic Wood Species
Today wood flooring is also offered in a variety of hardwood species that are not found in North America. Mohawk Engineered Hardwood Collections include some of the finest exotic in hardwoods from all over the world. These floors offer many unique and visually striking appearances that are distinctly differed from the North American hardwoods.
Prefinished Versus Unfinished
Unfinished floors require several days to install, stain and finish the flooring. Prefinished floors are less messy and can be installed and completed the same day. A factory-applied finish like Mohawk?s exclusive Crystalshield finish with aluminum oxide is extremely durable and could not be duplicated with a job site finish.
Where is the room?
Knowing where the floor will be installed is essential. Before choosing a floor determine if the room is above, on or below ground level. Mohawk Engineered Hardwood Floors can be used in most areas in the home including rooms below, on or above ground level. Solid wood floors are recommended for above ground level installations and must be nailed-down to a wood subfloor. These floors perform better in humidity-controlled environments.
Is your sub floor concrete or a type of wood substrate? Engineered floors are ideal for concrete slabs. For remodel projects you may want to consider Mohawk Engineered Hardwood floors that can be floated directly over the existing floor which eliminates the mess and additional costs of tearing out the old floor.
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