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Discuss Tiling Onto A Floating Concrete Floor in the Australia Tiling Forum area at TilersForums.com.

M

mine123

I would like to have my kitchen and bathroom floor tiled, only thing I can't work out is if the substrate is suitable.
The floors are concrete, a layer of dpm sheeting, polystyrene sheets overlayed with chipboard which has been glued on. A section of the kitchen floor is spongy where there has been some water damage and the chipboard has degraded.

Whilst getting a quote from a plumber to have the bathroom renovated he said the tiling onto the above would be fine using Ditra matting, but another company suggested against it saying there would still be movement.

So my questions are how do I fix the damaged areas and can the floors be tiled?

Thanks,
 
M

mine123

I would like to have my kitchen and bathroom floor tiled, only thing I can't work out is if the substrate is suitable.
The floors are concrete, a layer of dpm sheeting, polystyrene sheets overlayed with chipboard which has been glued on. A section of the kitchen floor is spongy where there has been some water damage and the chipboard has degraded.

Whilst getting a quote from a plumber to have the bathroom renovated he said the tiling onto the above would be fine using Ditra matting, but another company suggested against it saying there would still be movement.

So my questions are how do I fix the damaged areas and can the floors be tiled?

Thanks,

Edit - Concrete floating floors.
 

Ajax123

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nope. Unsuitable in my opinion.
 
J

Just Rizzle

Thanks for your reply, looks like its going to be laminate in the kitchen and vinyl in the bathrooms then.
if you want tile look in your kitchen and bathroom my solution would be to lay karndean looks as good if not better than tiles also it is highly flexible well suited to a bouncy floor
 
M

mine123

if you want tile look in your kitchen and bathroom my solution would be to lay karndean looks as good if not better than tiles also it is highly flexible well suited to a bouncy floor
Afraid so.

What's stopping you pulling it all up and redoing it a bit more stable?


Hi, not really an option as the kitchen has fitted units. Bathrooms not much better as the sanitary ware would be in the way.
 
M

mine123

if you want tile look in your kitchen and bathroom my solution would be to lay karndean looks as good if not better than tiles also it is highly flexible well suited to a bouncy floor

Thanks for the advice, I am now looking at Karndean/Amtico for the bathrooms and a uni-click laminate for the kitchen.
 

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