View Full Version : New home flooring cover for garage and lanai
jerrypierson
12-17-2019, 11:22 PM
We are building new home in Villages. What is best cover for garage and lanai floors? Is it better to let builder do or use after market?
Toymeister
12-18-2019, 05:22 AM
Epoxy hands down. I have done DIY and bought a home with it done by a pro.
The man that does this for a living work looked better. Since this job will be in the Lanai that's the one I would opt for. But don't use the builder, hire it out after you own the home. It is cheaper and you will have more choices in design.
baustgen
12-18-2019, 08:20 AM
Epoxy for garage. Keep something under the hot tires. I suggest you look at Chattahoochie river rock for the lanai.
Dan9871
12-18-2019, 02:32 PM
We put tile on the lanai. Not the same as inside the house. It was a tile that was rated as non-slip when wet and that complemented the outside color of the house. Everyone comments on it when they see it the first time. Epoxy in the garage.
raynan
12-18-2019, 04:37 PM
Yes be very careful of finishes that are slippery. Lots of our neighbors had their garage floors finished when they moved here and several fell. THey had a company come back and recover with sand in the mix.
jerrypierson
12-18-2019, 07:40 PM
Thanks
jerrypierson
12-18-2019, 07:54 PM
Got it
villagetinker
12-18-2019, 09:16 PM
The trick to keeping the floors from being slippery is to use 'shark grip' or the equal in the final coating, this provides a slip resistant coating when the floor is wet.
stadry
12-19-2019, 05:56 AM
we like solvent-based epoxies MUCH better than wtr-based because of performance & NO hot-tire pickup,,, 'slippery' can be addressed by adding 'shark's grip' ( ground plastic in a bottle avail @ sher-wms ) or aluminum oxide,,, bldrs generally buy this work from painters while decorative conc artisans are the aftermarket performers,,, the latter generally have more invested thru training, equipment, product support, experience,,, 1 MAJOR point - epoxies are not a 'final finish' - they need protective coatings on top ( generally urethane ),,, some guys will use polyureas/polyaspartics for a 1day start/finish job but that's too much into the weeds for this thread - so DRI diamond grind for prep, coat w/epoxy containing 'shark's grip', broadcast vinyl flakes to create trompe d-euil effect, seal w/urethane
'chattahoochee' is trowel-applied wtr-based epoxy containing graded aggregates hence color selection,,, probably fine for fl climate as the risk of freeze-that's very minimal
no idea on cost but, as a former contractor, i have an opinion - painters are cheaper but dca's deliver better work, offer more choice, & use compatible materials
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