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Renovation flooring is used in projects where existing conditions already exist—old substrates, height limitations, uneven surfaces, fixed doors, cabinets, and tight schedules.
Unlike new builds, renovation projects demand flooring that can adapt, not flooring that assumes ideal conditions.
Many renovation projects cannot afford thick build-ups. Raising floor height may cause:
Door clearance issues
Stair nosing mismatches
Cabinet and appliance conflicts
Thickness control is critical.
Old concrete, tile, or wooden subfloors are often:
Slightly uneven
Cracked or patched
Previously covered with adhesives
Flooring must tolerate minor imperfections or allow fast preparation.
Renovations are often done:
While residents still live inside
Under strict delivery deadlines
Fast installation and reduced downtime are key decision factors.

Click-lock systems significantly reduce:
Installation time
Labor cost
Risk of installation errors
They are preferred in renovation environments.
Stable flooring avoids:
Expansion stress against existing walls
Post-installation movement
Callbacks after handover
This is especially important when old structures limit expansion space.
Renovation flooring is often installed:
Over old tiles
Over existing wood
As partial replacement
Consistent thickness and profile control matter more than extreme performance.
Thin yet rigid structure
Excellent dimensional stability
Suitable for floating installation over existing surfaces
SPC flooring is one of the most renovation-friendly solutions.
Fast installation
Clean dry installation process
Suitable for dry residential renovation projects
Works well when moisture exposure is controlled.
Chosen mainly for aesthetic reasons
Requires stable indoor conditions
Better suited for partial or room-specific renovations
Not ideal for every renovation scenario, but effective when conditions allow.
Renovation flooring is widely used in:
Apartment upgrades
Old house refurbishments
Rental property renewals
Commercial-to-residential conversions
Partial room renovations
Each scenario prioritizes speed, predictability, and compatibility.


Solid wood or overly thick systems often cause:
Height conflicts
Increased preparation cost
Longer installation time
They may look premium but perform poorly in renovation settings.
Old buildings rarely allow ideal expansion gaps. Flooring that cannot tolerate this reality is risky.

Our renovation-oriented flooring focuses on:
Controlled thickness options
Stable SPC and laminate structures
Reliable click systems
Compatibility with real renovation conditions
The goal is smooth project execution, not theoretical perfection.
This page is intended for:
Renovation contractors
Property owners and developers
Flooring installers
Retailers serving renovation markets
Renovation flooring succeeds when it works with existing conditions—not against them.
