They asked which direction we wanted the tile laid beforehand and we told them to do it this way. Our last two houses were done the same way and the floors looked great. I haven’t seen any laid the opposite direction before tbh.Looks like they laid the hardwood the wrong direction shrinks he room. Width perception is much greater when laid lengthwise IMO. They like to do shortest run possible because it accepts way looser tolerances and sloppy work not so noticable. Way faster to buy up against long wall accurately laying it like they did.
That’s what I was thinking too. Early on in the build process, we had three different tradesmen delay their work for a combined total of 5 weeks, so perhaps that may have thrown off the rest of the schedule. In fact, the interior trim guy started hanging trim, worked for two days and then had to pull off to let the tile guy do his job.Looks good. Little surprised the floor went down before they painted. That’s opposite how it’s done here. Always interesting to see the difference in process’s in different parts of the country.
When painting is done prior to floor installation, contractors generally will not put down the paper to save time and cost. I wish the contractor that built our house would have put down paper. After removing carpet to install ceramic tile throughout the house, I had to do a LOT of intense paint overspray removal to obtain a bondable surface.That’s what I was thinking too. Early on in the build process, we had three different tradesmen delay their work for a combined total of 5 weeks, so perhaps that may have thrown off the rest of the schedule. In fact, the interior trim guy started hanging trim, worked for two days and then had to pull off to let the tile guy do his job.
I’ve been in other houses where they’ve painted after the flooring was done and noticed that they put down some
very thick mil paper to protect them. Not sure how this guy or the painters will protect them, but they will have to do something for sure.
I noticed that our tile installer sanded the entire floor with a commercial grade sander, followed by a good vacuuming to get the drywall mud and other stuff that had been spilled on the floor up before tile went down.When painting is done prior to floor installation, contractors generally will not put down the paper to save time and cost. I wish the contractor that built our house would have put down paper. After removing carpet to install ceramic tile throughout the house, I had to do a LOT of intense paint overspray removal to obtain a bondable surface.
I thought as much.....They asked which direction we wanted the tile laid beforehand and we told them to do it this way. Our last two houses were done the same way and the floors looked great. I haven’t seen any laid the opposite direction before tbh.
When painting is done prior to floor installation, contractors generally will not put down the paper to save time and cost. I wish the contractor that built our house would have put down paper. After removing carpet to install ceramic tile throughout the house, I had to do a LOT of intense paint overspray removal to obtain a bondable surface.
I noticed that our tile installer sanded the entire floor with a commercial grade sander, followed by a good vacuuming to get the drywall mud and other stuff that had been spilled on the floor up before tile went down.