iMCaan Posted July 16 Share Posted July 16 Hi We are thinking of tiling the entire ground floor about 150m2 in our self build house. The ground floor has underfloor heating and is screeded. I have recently come across an epoxy company who claim epoxy floor is has good as floor tiles. Their quote (labour + material) is just above the quote for for fitting floor tiles (labour + material). The epoxy company mainly specialises in commercial epoxy floors but they insist that a lot of people are having epoxy floors installed in houses. They say that they can achieve any marble/tile like design. My thoughts are if it's good for commercial premises surely it's good in a house. Has anyone had any experience of having a epoxy floor on top of screeded underfloor heating? Any advice/suggestions are highly appreciated. Thanks Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nod Posted July 16 Share Posted July 16 Both can look good Porcelain is more durable Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IanR Posted July 16 Share Posted July 16 (edited) 35 minutes ago, iMCaan said: Has anyone had any experience of having a epoxy floor on top of screeded underfloor heating? I have a resin floor on power-floated concrete with UFH, but it's a PU Resin. Are you sure the product you have been offered is epoxy? My base layer is epoxy, but all other layers are PU. It's a warmer, softer feel than tiles with good wear resistance. I'm told the top coat with eventually show signs of wear, at which point it can be re-coated, which gives the option for a colour change. Still looks new after 7 years. We treat it like a wooden floor, so furniture on felt pads and careful with sharp objects, ie. not as hardy as Porcelain, but then if a dropped a hammer on it there'd be no risk of it cracking. Rugs can cause a colour change, a slight yellowing we have found, but remove the rug and a few weeks later the yellowing disappears. No grout lines or expansion joints is a big bonus, we have 250m² of seamless floor. Edited July 16 by IanR 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
iMCaan Posted July 16 Author Share Posted July 16 Thanks nod. I didn't think the longevity. There's a big difference. Epoxy floor: 10-20 years Longevity: Porcelain 60+ years Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
iMCaan Posted July 16 Author Share Posted July 16 Thanks IanR 7 minutes ago, IanR said: I have a resin floor on power-floated concrete with UFH, but it's a PU Resin. Are you sure the product you have been offered is epoxy? I'm not sure. I'm going to see one of their installation and will confirm. He did say they'll be a levelling compound and then they'll be ~3mm finishing layer. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nod Posted July 16 Share Posted July 16 50 minutes ago, IanR said: I have a resin floor on power-floated concrete with UFH, but it's a PU Resin. Are you sure the product you have been offered is epoxy? My base layer is epoxy, but all other layers are PU. It's a warmer, softer feel than tiles with good wear resistance. I'm told the top coat with eventually show signs of wear, at which point it can be re-coated, which gives the option for a colour change. Still looks new after 7 years. We treat it like a wooden floor, so furniture on felt pads and careful with sharp objects, ie. not as hardy as Porcelain, but then if a dropped a hammer on it there'd be no risk of it cracking. Rugs can cause a colour change, a slight yellowing we have found, but remove the rug and a few weeks later the yellowing disappears. No grout lines or expansion joints is a big bonus, we have 250m² of seamless floor. I’ve laid both and treating resin like wood is very good advise Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
iMCaan Posted July 16 Author Share Posted July 16 Does treating resin floor like wood mean you have to apply some kind of coating to the resin floor every so often? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IanR Posted July 16 Share Posted July 16 46 minutes ago, iMCaan said: Does treating resin floor like wood mean you have to apply some kind of coating to the resin floor every so often? Nope, just meant being a little careful with it, if you want to keep it looking its best. We mistakingly dragged a metal cog crate across it and that left a scratch (as it would do with wood). No coating required, until it needs a re-finish, which I'd judge to be around 20 years. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alan Ambrose Posted July 17 Share Posted July 17 Yeah I have two bathrooms with electric heated floor and epoxy over. I quite like them. Would have been even better if I had worn my glasses so I could have seen the tiny bubbles on one side... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now