Identifying asbestos floor tiles.
Covering asbestos floor tiles with hardwood.
Deal with asbestos tile is to leave it in place and cover it with new flooring.
Common in homes built in the 20th century black mastic was used as an adhesive for ceramic tile linoleum and other flooring materials.
Give a plain concrete floor some.
Using concrete to encapsulate asbestos tiles starts by having a clean well washed floor surface.
Resilient sheet flooring containing asbestos was also produced finding wide use as early as 1968.
Staining a concrete floor.
More importantly it s scary because of the health hazards that asbestos tile flooring is associated with.
Easy to clean and can give you the look of hardwood floors without the cost.
If your floor can be thicker without causing problems install a porcelain floor over the old asbestos.
However as a favor to future owners of your house make some note of the fact that asbestos tiles are under the new flooring.
But that changes as soon as you decide to remove it.
You could also cover the tiles with new vinyl flooring linoleum or even ceramic tiles.
Porcelain floors are extremely versatile and durable with tile sizes up to 24 inches available for a clean modern look with fewer grout lines.
The old tiles are relatively thin around 1 8 inch thick so installing new.
Vinyl is a type of plastic that has long been a popular material for floor tiles and sheets.
Let s look a little closer at the process involved with covering asbestos floor tiles with concrete.
The thought of having asbestos in your home is scary to most people.
When you remove that floor covering to make way for new flooring you may encounter the mastic and wonder whether it is safe to remove the main concern surrounding this question is that black mastic often contains asbestos.
Armstrong produced the excelon tile series beginning with a plastic asbestos floor tile series in 1954 referring to the product as vinyl plastic asbestos floor tiles beginning in 1955 and vinyl asbestos tiles from 1957 to 1980.