Bamboo Flooring – Kitchen Floors
October 11, 2008 by admin · Leave a Comment
If you are looking to use eco-friendly bamboo flooring, kitchen floors are just perfect! Bamboo flooring is beautiful, trendy and holds up well to daily use so having it in your kitchen can be a great way to keep your kitchen design green.
Bamboo is actually a grass and it grows very quickly so it is a renewable resource. Unlike an Oak tree which may take 120 years to grow big enough to produce boards for your kitchen floor, bamboo grows to maturity in three to seven years. It’s not harmed by harvesting and self propagates via rhizomes which spread underground.
You can get bamboo flooring for your kitchen in a variety of colors. It can be left in a lighter natural color or carbonized to achieve the dark amber color. This carbonizing actually reduces the hardness of the floor so you might want to think twice about this for kitchen flooring. However if you want a bit of color on your floor it can be dyed to achieve a different tone. Bear in mind, however that the graining of bamboo is not like other woods so it won’t take a stain like pine or oak. If you are considering staining your bamboo floor, you’d best do some experimenting on scrap pieces first.
Bamboo Flooring Kitchen Installation
Installing bamboo flooring is the same as installing other kinds of wood flooring. It comes from the factory prefinished and can be glued or nailed but be advised that most of it uses a urea formaldehyde adhesive during the lamination process. You urea formaldehyde is known to be harmful to indoor air quality, but all flooring uses it and bamboo uses a smaller amount.
Just like other types of wood, you’ll want to leave your bamboo inside the kitchen for a few days to let it acclimate to the temperature and humidity before you install it.
Most bamboo manufacturers tout that it is harder than your typical hardwood flooring, however the hardness of your bamboo depends on the species of grass that is used as well as the aged it is when it is harvested. Most of the bamboo that we get in the US comes from the Hunan Province in southern China and is actually harvested from natural plantation groves.
If you are considering bamboo flooring for your kitchen, you want to be sure that it is certified by the Forest Stewardship Council so as to be sure that the bamboo is grown responsibly, without the use of pesticides and meets the criteria for sustainability.


