84 points

Good ol’ vinyl wood-lookalike planks. Cheap to buy, cheap to install, easy to repair without tearing up the whole floor, glues right down to the beautiful hardwood underneath.

No wonder landlords love them

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18 points

Here these are usually wood composite boards with a layer of veneer on top. Technically wooden floors, but not actually. Still a major step up from plastic floors.

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11 points

You’re talking engineered wood floors and the other guy is talking about luxury vinyl plank (LVP).

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14 points

Landlord Vinyl Plank, I call it

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7 points

Not a good option, especially for a rental. They bubble up when it gets wet. It’s better to install vinyl plank so it doesn’t get destroyed in a year.

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-8 points

why would a floor get wet?

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1 point

Chaulked right full of urea based glues though. If it’s new sleep with the windows open.

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8 points

The true landlord way is to not even bother gluing them down so you can keep your tenant’s security deposit for “damaging the floors”

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25 points
*

You’re not supposed to glue them. It’s a “floating” floor meaning it needs to be allowed to expand and contract according to temperature and humidity. If you glue it down it’ll start bulging and joints will open up. I install these for a living and the manufacturer instructions specifically forbid the use of glue.

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5 points

Relatively cheap to install especially when it can be laid over the old flooring but it’s not exactly cheap to buy though. Personally I vastly prefer the feel of LVP to laminate or parquet. It feels warmer and softer and is also much less slippery and waterproof. As a general contractor I also prefer installing it over the others.

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1 point

The last time I installed them was a few years ago so “cheap” might have changed since then. But I did a 20’x15’ kitchen all by myself with a pair of scissors for like $300 and about a day’s work. (Though I didn’t put it down over hardwood because I’m not a monster.)

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37 points

This is my exact fucking floor.

I have a heat pump and my landlord isn’t a psycho though, so the only way I’m moving is via the coroner’s van

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2 points

Yet my place, that was built in the last decade, only has AC. If I want to switch to a bi directional heat pump, they’ll need to access the lines to add insulation, which would have added maybe a couple hundred dollars to the building cost but at this point would involve opening up walls. All that on top of the several thousand to buy the heat pump unit itself plus a conversion or new air exchanger.

The technical difference between an AC and heat pump is so trivial that IMO ACs that aren’t heat pumps should be banned.

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36 points

It’s like walking around on squeaky slick loud plastic.

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17 points

It literally is that

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5 points

It could be laminate which is mostly made of wood, and only a little plastic… -sigh-

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6 points

Laminate swells really badly if water gets between the cracks though. Had to replace mine. Vinyl planks, while being entirely plastic, at least aren’t made of compressed cardboard.

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18 points

They make even cheaper stuff now, like a vinyl, fake wood sticker that goes on. I currently have that in my apartment.

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3 points

The photo appears to be LVP.

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4 points

I think it’s TVP

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5 points

Looks like MTV to me

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11 points

I have that floor and luxury it aint. Is nicer than carpet though

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7 points
*

I legit have this floor, my rent is actually $3050 in the back fucking woods of Massachusetts. It was literally the cheapest 3 bedroom we could find (partners kids). New construction, corporate landlord. Literally no idea who owns the property, or to whom my rent goes.

When I moved out of my last apartment a couple years ago(which was the exact same size), gorgeous 100yr old mill housing. Has solid wood doors, real tiled bathroom, recently (within the last 10yrs) redone electrical and HVAC. Plus the landlord and his wife were legitimately rad people and lived in the building next door and we smoked weed together, had cookouts and fires. Rent was $1650.

And the BEST part, they didn’t even install the flooring correctly. It’s less than 2yr old building, screws are backing out and making bumps. On top of the tiles that are peeling/lifting.

Like, my partner and I have great jobs and it’s only manageable. I have absolutely zero clue how anyone doing slightly worse is getting by.

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4 points

I have two kids, their shared bathroom was carpeted. Now it looks like this. 🙏🏼

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11 points

Carpet in a bathroom should be outlawed due to health hazard

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3 points

Insurance companies should support as well to avoid all the water damage caused by the inevitable flood.🤦🏾‍♀️

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4 points

Carpet is really nice when it’s brand new, and then it’s never nice again.

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Canada Housing

!canadahousing@lemmy.ca

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This is a community to discuss the housing crisis in Canada.

All so Canadians can find a decent home to live in.

Racism is still absolutely prohibited, but you are welcome to debate population growth, immigration rate, foreign home buyers, and the merits of single family homes or the green zone.

A merge of r/canadahousing and r/canadahousing2 for those coming from Reddit.

Bits of the sidebar and logo taken from those subs and will be going through a slight revision as things get settled.

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