These days, there’s a growing interest
in installing environmentally friendly flooring materials
among designers, builders and facilities managers. The use
of sustainable floor covering products and environmentally
responsible maintenance products and procedures has become
a top priority for many facilities.
That’s one of the reasons why linoleum
is experiencing renewed popularity. It’s made entirely
of renewable raw materials—linseed oil, cork powders,
tree resin, wood flour and clay pigments, with jute backing.
Linoleum has been around for decades (remember it in your
grandmother’s kitchen?), but today’s improvements
in its manufacture, installation and maintainability—and
how it performs in commercial and industrial installations—are
significant.
Linoleum is relatively easy to maintain (as long as it’s
kept well polished to avoid scuff marks) while providing a
quiet, warm, cushioned surface underfoot. Add to this a lengthy
lifecycle, inherent coloration and good durability, and it’s
clear that linoleum presents a good flooring option for many
environments.
Cork is a pure, natural material
that does not out-gas or shed micro-fibers, thus causing no
negative impact to indoor air quality. It comes from a tree
commonly known as the Cork Oak, whose bark splits naturally
every 9 to 15 years and can be safely harvested, causing no
harm to the tree. The bark re-grows and the cycle continues
for many years—some trees have been known to continue
producing for 500 years.
This type of flooring is not only warm to walk on and extremely
quiet, with natural sound-absorbing qualities, but also hypoallergenic
and naturally resistant to mold and mildew. Installation is
similar to that of hardwood flooring, and cork flooring can
be finished off with urethane, vinyl, wax or oil.
Assumed by many to be a byproduct of trees, bamboo
is actually a fast-growing grass. Since it matures from sprouting
to harvesting in three to five years, an acre of bamboo can
provide significantly more flooring materials than an acre
of trees. And when bamboo shoots are cut the roots remain
intact—so bamboo’s growth is cyclical.
Bamboo is an attractive alternative to hardwood: It is eco-friendly,
flame resistant, dimensionally stable, harder than many popular
wood flooring species, and more impervious to moisture. Sold
in planks, bamboo flooring is installed much like engineered
hardwood floors—it can either be nailed or glued down
or floated over a wide variety of sub-floors.
There are many other materials that can be used for flooring,
including fibers like seagrass, coir, jute, and sisal, all
derived from natural and renewable resources. All of these
come with latex backing (synthetic or natural), making them
usable in heavy traffic areas.
Another major consideration for contractors, designers and
facilities managers where the manufacture, assembly, or use
of sensitive electronic components is ongoing is the installation
of Electrostatic Discharge (ESD) flooring.
The transfer of even imperceptible static electric charges
can damage memory chips or micro-circuitry, with the potential
for rendering millions of dollars of equipment inoperative.
Manufacturers and users of computers, photocopying machines,
medical instruments, communications and defense-related equipment
face this concern on a daily basis. ESD flooring—like
vinyl, epoxy, carpet and rubber—grounds these static
charges from the human body to earth before they can damage
sensitive equipment or create a disastrous spark in a highly
flammable area. This ensures that body voltage potentials
are kept at very low levels.
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