dmccarty
Super Star Member
Totally off topic here, but tell me about your floors. My whole downstairs is really nice reclaimed hardwood, except for the den which is on a concrete slab and has grungy wall-to-wall carpet that needs to go. Don't really want to re-install carpet but it is one of the cheapest options. Tell me about the finished concrete floors. Can they be added on top of a typical slab like mine? What do they look like? Do they have a brick or stone pattern in them? Color? What about cost?
Our floor is a light brownish yellow. Looks like tan tile. Just bigger.
I wish I had my camera when the concrete came down flowing off the truck. The five guys were standing there ready to shovel that concrete. They saw this dark brown mass flowing down. It looked like poo.
You can also take the die/pigment and toss it on the wet concrete and smooth it into the top layer. This is cheaper but if the concrete gets chipped you will see the underlying color. So we just colored the whole mass.
We had a pattern I designed for each room cut into the concrete once it dried. I tried to have a grid 3'x3' but this depended on the size of the room. The cuts were for the design but also to force any cracking into the cuts. This worked for the most part. There are some places were cracking has happened outside the cracks. It looks like we have a floor made up of large tiles.
We wanted to filled the cuts with grout. We picked out a colored grout to use and it is sitting in the barn. We just never got around to putting in the grout. I like the cuts being open since the dirt gets pushed into the cuts and its easier to vacuum up.
The slab was also "trowled" with a motorized machine. It did not come out as we had expected. It was not smooth. We poured on July 4th and it was the hottest day of the summer.
They can also color existing concrete as well. I have seen very fancy designs cut into the floors. Our is just simple.
There are a large number of colors to pick. Even a blue color that was EXTREMELY expensive. The suppler said they only place that had ever used it was Duke University.
The only complaint I have and complaint is too strong of a word is that I have not really figured out how to mop up dirt that gets into the concrete. You can mop and mop but it never is clean clean clean but then you can't ever clean clean clean carpet either.
We like the floor. And with the wood stove we use to heat we don't really have to worry about a spark flying out when we feed the fire. What is the spark going to do? Burn concrete?
Later,
Dan