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#1 |
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1 Dog, 2 Cats and a G-Pig
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Crap Arbor
Age: 28
Posts: 981
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Hardwood Floors
Anyone know how much it costs to get hardwood floors installed in a house? Labor & Materials... just a rough estimate would be great.
Thanks all!
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1998 2.3L CL Metallic Green Premium Auto Trans 101K :( All Weather Front & Rear Floor Mats Weathertech Trunk Liner Compustar 2WFM Alarm & Starter 1/4 mile range K&N Air Filter and Oil Filter Running AMSOil Got her 11/5/02 (69K on her) |
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#2 | |
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Mega Moderator
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Swansea, MA
Age: 42
Posts: 32,285
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Quote:
That'll make a big difference in the price. I've got pergo in the kitchen (real hardwoods in the bedrooms and living room), but it was all there when I bought teh house. |
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#3 |
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is Pretty Much a Moron
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Rochester, NY
Age: 22
Posts: 8,139
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We have real hardwoon in two rooms, and pergo in one room and our sunroom. IMO, the pergo is nicer. THe hardwood floors get real nasty lookin real fast, but the pergo looks good for years.
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#4 |
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What your problem is?
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Houston, TX
Age: 29
Posts: 4,368
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My buddy did his entire entire house (minus the kitchen) 3300 sq ft for about $15k, we did it ourselves... for everything I think professionals wanted about $27k.... it is crazy expensive, but if you got allergies and pets well worth it...
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#5 |
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Homeless
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Northern DEL-A-Where?
Age: 35
Posts: 9,587
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Just materials, about $4 sq ft.
Labor is crazy. |
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#6 |
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1 Dog, 2 Cats and a G-Pig
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Crap Arbor
Age: 28
Posts: 981
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Thanks all. Probably Pergo, not the most expensive stuff. I don't have that much space to do, maybe 1000 sq. ft. I can't find anywhere that just gives rough prices. I'll call around before I do it, but I'd like an idea up front.
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#7 | |
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What your problem is?
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Houston, TX
Age: 29
Posts: 4,368
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#8 | |
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Mega Moderator
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Swansea, MA
Age: 42
Posts: 32,285
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Quote:
I haven't gotten "real" estimates on what it will cost to side my house, but guessimates put it at 7K-15K. My step-dad and I vinyl sided his new two car garage last summer, and figure we can side my house for about 2.5-3.5K in materials. |
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#9 |
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Where is my super sauce?
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Tick-Tock Tech
Posts: 5,872
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Looks like people are right on target -- about $10000 - 15000/floor professionally installed.
We just had our floors re-sanded and refinished for about $1200/floor. |
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#10 | |
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Mega Moderator
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Swansea, MA
Age: 42
Posts: 32,285
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#11 | |
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Where is my super sauce?
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Tick-Tock Tech
Posts: 5,872
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#12 |
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Mega Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: SoCal
Posts: 25,784
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I have heard good stuff about Pergo, but this is what we are putting down in part of the house we are building. Heard good stuff about it and seen it in person so we went with it.
http://www.quick-step.com/welcome.aspx |
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#13 |
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Mega Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2001
Age: 48
Posts: 7,573
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I have butcher block pergo in one bathroom and HATE IT! It looks like the cheeeep ass shit that it is. Don't cheese out and buy it, esp. if you're going to have 1000 sq feet of it. It has a gloss that looks like a dull plastic looking shine. This will especially true where there's a lot of direct light on it. My law partner put it on his office floor (25x30) and it looks like shee-ot. I told him not to buy it but he didn't believe me. The rest of my home has Brazilian cherry hardwood floors on the first floor and is the way to go. It cost ~70 percent over a high end berber plus installation.
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#14 |
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Health's Angels
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Kandahar, Afghanistan
Age: 39
Posts: 2,609
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I got about 2,000^ft of cherry HW installed...looked real nice, then my dog scratched the shit out of it. Cherry is technically a HW, but it is the softest of them, so if durability is a concern, get oak.
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#15 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Lakeway, TX
Posts: 7,533
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#16 | |
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Mega Moderator
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 13,064
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Okay, I'm glad you viced this opinion... it does look badass from the link supplied..I need to see it in person.
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#17 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: palatine, il
Posts: 2,251
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Just my opinion, but I think Pergo sounds "cheap" when it is walked on, especially by a woman in heels.
My company owns Wilsonart, and they make a pergo like floor. All of the fake wood floors have issues, but if you do go fake wood, make sure all sides, not just the top of the laminate is sealed. The main issue is water and swelling, so you need sealed sides or a glued together floor. My though is that nothing beats a real, hardwood oak floor. And if you really want it to be pretty, get a quote on a "quartersawn" oak floor. I have two friends who own businesses installing real hardwood floors. Both millionaires under 55. Although they are losing business to Pergo and the like, they will not touch the stuff due to the water problem. If you go with real hardwood, here is what you do not want to have happen. You decide to go with real 3/4" thick strip oak and sign the contract on Monday. Tuesday, the guys show up to install the floor. No, no, no. Although hardwood floors can be installed at anytime of the year, the ideal times are the spring and the fall, when humidity is average, neither high nor low. At any rate, the wood should be dropped off in your home, the bundles broken up, such that the wood can "aclimate" to the temperature and humidity conditions in your home. After a week or so, then construction can begin. If you go real hardwood, there is a very good clear finish imported from europe called "Glitza." If after staining (if stained at all) and Glitza is applied, get the hell out of the house and take your pets for the next 24 hours. The solvents used are very toxic, but the finished product is very beautiful. The guys who apply glitza wear full body protection and have pressurized air pumped into their suits. This is not a do it yourself job. On top of this, weather you go real or artificial, there are moisture issues...some of these floors have to "float" (not be nailed down in the artificial case) for expansion and contraction. Down in Danville, IL, I had to fly one of my friends down there to look at the foyer of the quaker oats company that had a hardwood floor put in in the dead of winter, wall to wall, when the humidity in the air and the moisture content of the wood was lowest. The foyer was about 100x100 feet. This floor was not installed by my friend. When we got there, in the middle of the foyer, the floor was approaching knee high due to swelling. In winter, if you go real hardwood, do not be alarmed if you see the seams between the wood begin to open, even if it is clear coated and "sealed". This will happen. It will close up when the humidity rises to its "as installed" condition. What you do want to do is keep those gaps cleanly vacuumed. We once did a strip oak floor for a doctor in the chicago northwest suburbs, who I thought was absolutely crazy. The floor finish? Absolutely jet black, in a white room with jet black dining furniture. It turned out absolutely, completely, drop dead georgeous! |
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