
Composite floorboards
Composite floors consist of a load-bearing layer on which a solid wooden top layer is glued.
Due to the layering of the parts, the tendency to work is many times smaller than with solid wood. The thickness of the existing top layer determines the lifespan of these floors and varies from 3 to 6 mm. A top layer of 4 mm on average is good for at least 30 years or longer under good conditions. This type of floor lends itself well to floating installation, but can also be glued down and is an excellent choice on a screed with underfloor heating.
Multiboards
Constructed from wood, layers of birch plywood glued together as a carrier with a top layer of oak or other types of wood. The thickness of the top layer varies from 3 to 6 mm. Our oak multi-plank floor parts are of French or Eastern European origin.
Slat planks
Also constructed from wood, with quarter-sawn strips of pine wood between the layers of the carrier, provided with a 4 mm thick top layer. Always pre-treated and ready to use. The origin of the wood is Eastern European.
Share with a click connection
This concerns planks with a top layer of so-called noble wood and a layer of HDF and/or pine in terms of carrier for the 3.5 mm thick top layer of oak or other types of wood, including accacia, merbau, beech, white maple (Canadian maple) or ash. Always pre-treated and ready to use. The origin of the top layer of the wood depends on the growing area and ranges from North and South America to Eastern and Western Europe. The assembly of these click-system planks takes place in Germany. Very suitable for the handy do-it-yourselfer, this floor can also be dismantled and re-installed.