Carpet or traditional parquet
These are 6 to 10 mm thick parquet floors, glued and nailed using traditional methods to an 8 mm thick mosaic oak subfloor installed by us. Because perfectly level screeds are rare, this subfloor is ideal for compensating for any level differences, which can later be removed by sanding the subfloor.
Next, the sanded subfloor is glued down, and the solid parquet flooring, without tongue and groove joints, is laid cold against each other in the adhesive and nailed into the subfloor, which we have laid and sanded flat. The floor is then sanded in stages from coarse to fine, and all nail holes are filled by hand. After this, the floor is polished smooth. Once this is done, the floor is treated as desired, either varnished or oiled.
The major advantage of this type of parquet flooring construction is that the choice of subfloor, combined with the rest of the parquet flooring, creates a fantastically solid and virtually warp-free final product. These floors also offer the widest selection of flooring types available, in addition to the popular plank flooring. Think of herringbone, Hungarian point, Versailles panels, and special patterns, among others.