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Bamboo Flooring: The Grass is Tougher…
What you will learn: The strength of bamboo in its natural habitat;
environmental benefits of choosing bamboo flooring; the process of turning
bamboo into flooring; two distinct colors of bamboo flooring; three distinct
styles of bamboo flooring; about vertical-style, horizontal style, and
strand-woven style bamboo flooring.
Bamboo is quickly gaining popularity for use as both household and commercial
flooring. Find out how this fast-growing, sustainable plant with style and
durability that has come to rival traditional hardwood as a quality flooring
material.
For some, it is odd to think that bamboo, a type of grass, would serve as a
durable flooring surface. And yet, bamboo flooring is becoming known as an
attractive, long lasting and environmentally friendly alternative to the more
conventional choice of hardwood flooring. The bamboo plant is extremely well
adapted to its environment, unaffected by poor soil quality and other outside
influences. Bamboo is a very fast growing type of grass, one of the fastest
growing in the world, and the vitality of bamboo plants is not harmed by
harvesting. The shoots of the harvested bamboo plant remain alive and quickly
re-grow new stalks, making bamboo a highly renewable resource. As such, bamboo
has become a popular choice of flooring by ecologically minded consumers,
perhaps the "greenest" flooring of flooring materials as well as one of the
most aesthetically pleasing.
What happens after harvesting
Once the bamboo is harvested, the green outer skin of the bamboo is removed and
the bamboo stalk is cut lengthwise into strips or "fillets." The filleted
strips of bamboo – still curved because they are a section of a round stalk –
are milled along their outer edges to make a flat strip. (The excess trim is
turned into "strand-woven" bamboo, a separate process which we discuss later.)
The flat strips are kiln dried to remove the bamboo’s natural moisture, and
then boiled to eliminate natural starches and sugars. Boiling the bamboo
actually serves two purposes. By removing starch and sugar, the bamboo flooring
is rendered unattractive to termites and other pests that can infest many wood
products. This termite resistance makes bamboo an especially suitable material
for certain geographical areas. In addition, bamboo flooring is less prone to
expanding and contracting due to climate changes, specifically temperature and
humidity, than many traditional hardwoods. The other reason for boiling the
bamboo is for its aesthetic purpose.
Carbonized Bamboo
By boiling the bamboo for a longer period, the material turns a darker color
than its natural blonde appearance. The darker "brownish" color, known as
"carbonized" bamboo, along with the light-blonde color of the earlier stages in
the process, provide a choice of natural bamboo flooring colors that work with
any decorating scheme. There are also different surface patterns in bamboo
flooring that are created in the manufacturing process.
Horizontal and Vertical Styles of Bamboo Flooring
After the bamboo strips are boiled, they are again kiln dried, and glued
together into one of two styles. By gluing a number of strips together with
their narrow edges (the thickness of the bamboo stalk) facing up, the flooring
pattern is an attractive bamboo edge grain with thin lines between the
laminated strips. This style of bamboo flooring is called "vertical style." The
bamboo strips can also be glued together along their narrow edges so their
wider surfaces face up. In this style, the strips would also be laminated in
three layers so the thickness of the floor is the same as the vertical style.
The three-layered style, with the wider flat surface of the bamboo strip
showing on top, is called "horizontal style." The unique aesthetic feature of
horizontal style bamboo flooring is that the natural growth rings of the stalk,
the "knuckles" as they’re also known, are visible in a randomly scattered
appearance on the floor’s surface. Both these styles of bamboo flooring receive
a final pressing after lamination to ensure their structural integrity before
proceeding to the final steps of milling and finishing. Both horizontal-style
and vertical-style bamboo flooring are available in blonde or carbonized
coloring, and both are enjoyed for their particular, naturally attractive
features.
Strand-Woven Bamboo Flooring
In addition to horizontal- and vertical-style bamboo flooring, one other style
of bamboo flooring is also manufactured. This style is known as "strand-woven"
bamboo flooring, and is produced from the excess strands trimmed at the stage
of milling the curved bamboo fillets, as mentioned earlier. Not only is
strand-woven bamboo another particularly attractive bamboo floor style, it also
demonstrates another environmentally responsible feature of bamboo as a
flooring material. Nothing is wasted in the making of this durable line of
flooring. Instead of discarding the excess trim from the bamboo stalk, bamboo
innovators discovered these long, thin strands of bamboo created a beautiful
pattern when intertwined and manufactured into anther bamboo flooring product.
Thus was born strand-woven bamboo in a process that compresses the strands with
an environmentally safe resin into a new piece of "timber" which is:
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Scratch resistant
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UV resistant
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Moisture resistant
The newly constituted bamboo timber, with its own uniquely attractive
strand-woven bamboo pattern, is a strong and durable material that is then sawn
into attractive planks, and turned into its own unique style of bamboo
flooring. Because strand-woven bamboo is already compressed at extremely high
pressure at the timber-making stage, it does not receive the final pressing
applied to horizontal- and vertical-style bamboo.
Final Stages in Making Bamboo Flooring
In the final manufacturing stages, all three types of bamboo flooring boards –
horizontal-style, vertical style, and strand-woven – are milled and finished to
complete the process of producing refined flooring products. With precision
milling, the tongue-and-groove connection on each bamboo flooring board ensures
the snug fit and smooth surface that you expect from a quality product. The
clear coating that finishes your bamboo flooring will also enhance its natural
beauty and provide an extra-level of protection for years to come. A quality
product will be finished with as many as six coats of aluminum oxide, giving
your already extremely hard bamboo floor even more protection against surface
wear or damage.
And there you have it! A common grass turned into an exceptionally attractive
and exceptionally durable flooring option. Bamboo flooring is a tough,
beautiful, and environmentally friendly flooring material quickly being
discovered as an excellent alternative to traditional hardwood flooring.
Back to Bamboo Flooring College
©2008 by BuildDirect.com Technologies Inc. (BuildDirect™). All rights reserved.
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• Bamboo flooring matches some hardwoods, such as oak, for hardness.
• Bamboo flooring is a highly renewable resource, each plant cycling about six
to eight years between harvests.
• Bamboo flooring is available in different cuts, styles and colors that allow
you to mix-and-match just as you can with other types of flooring.
• Bamboo flooring is naturally suited to moisture resistance.
• Bamboo is less costly than hardwood flooring.
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