GBA Logo horizontal Facebook LinkedIn Email Pinterest Twitter Instagram YouTube Icon Navigation Search Icon Main Search Icon Video Play Icon Plus Icon Minus Icon Picture icon Hamburger Icon Close Icon Sorted

社区and Q&A

Economic way to remodel for short term

Hammer| Posted inGeneral Questionson

So saving up for a complete kitchen remodel in 5 years but want to do some remodeling in area without spending too much money. Just need an opinion on a few things:

1. My kitchen floor is linoleum tile could I leave it and cover it with peel and stick vinyl wood flooring. Will it look good for a few years?

2. I’m removing a bathroom on 1st level (above basement). The floor is concrete and the floor, ceiling, and walls are all tiled. Can I glue 1/4 drywall over walls and ceiling and carpet right over concrete floor? This is not slab level so I think moisture is not an issue. Only thing I would probably need done professionally is some electrical outlets so I can make this an office for now.

GBA Prime

Join the leading community of building science experts

Become a GBA Prime member and get instant access to the latest developments in green building, research, and reports from the field.

Replies

  1. GBA Editor
    Brian Pontolilo||#1

    嗨,乔。

    您的第一个问题的答案是,您可以做到这一点。但是,乙烯基并不是特别绿色的产品,当涉及到更多参与的改建时,剥离和固定的果皮将不像浮动地板那样容易去除。我无法评论耐用性,因为它可能会因一种产品而异。

    As far as the second question goes, you probably can glue drywall to the tile, but I am not sure what you are saving, only the labor of removing the tile, which you can do yourself. And gluing the drywall to the tile only means an even messier demolition process down the road. I'd remove the tile and hang the drywall properly.

    If the concrete is not in contact with the ground, carpeting over it will probably be fine.

  2. Hammer||#2

    Thanks Brian, you are right in that there is no point in not ripping the tile off. Can you glue drywall to directly to studs? As far as flooring I would rather use a floating floor, right now I do have a 1 inch step from living room into kitchen. I was worried about adding additional height with a floating floor but they are so thin I don't think it would make much of a difference

  3. Walter Ahlgrim||#3

    If the old floor is unsafe for use I say cover it with one of the snap together wood or vinyl floors. They go down and come back up with ease.

    If the current floor is merely ugly I say live with it until you are ready to do the job right.

    Cheap short term fix are a total waste of money and do not add value to a property.

    Walta

Log in or create an account to post an answer.

社区

Recent Questions and Replies

  • |
  • |
  • |
  • |