I have an early 1970s bungalow with concrete floor. Every room was covered in thermoplastic ("Marley") tiles, attached with a thin layer of bituminous adhesive.
The tiles have been removed in some rooms, leaving the bitumen, probably <1mm thick, and not sticky.
In most rooms, the tiles are still in place, in varying conditions. Previous carpet fitters have nailed gripper rods through the tiles, so the perimeter tiles are all cracked and the edge pieces have been discarded due to getting sucked up when vacuuming.
I'm not sure what to do now. I notice that in one room, somebody has used some kind of creamy-coloured filler/resin to fill in broken pieces of the tiles and this seems to have held up well. Any idea of a suitable product for filling, or am I better off just pulling them up?
But then what to do about the bitumen adhesive?
I was considering sheet vinyl flooring, so have concerns about uneven levels generally, but also staining coming through from the old tile adhesive. Would laminate with underlay be less hassle? (I initially disregarded the idea of laminate/wood due to uneven screed levels)
The tiles have been removed in some rooms, leaving the bitumen, probably <1mm thick, and not sticky.
In most rooms, the tiles are still in place, in varying conditions. Previous carpet fitters have nailed gripper rods through the tiles, so the perimeter tiles are all cracked and the edge pieces have been discarded due to getting sucked up when vacuuming.
I'm not sure what to do now. I notice that in one room, somebody has used some kind of creamy-coloured filler/resin to fill in broken pieces of the tiles and this seems to have held up well. Any idea of a suitable product for filling, or am I better off just pulling them up?
But then what to do about the bitumen adhesive?
I was considering sheet vinyl flooring, so have concerns about uneven levels generally, but also staining coming through from the old tile adhesive. Would laminate with underlay be less hassle? (I initially disregarded the idea of laminate/wood due to uneven screed levels)