Hi AT,
I live in a rental unit and absolutely hate the tile on our bathroom floor. The owner doesn't want to bother with the upgrade. Is there a good solution to cover it up? Are there other options to go on top of it that would remove fairly easy when we end up leaving this apartment? [close-up after the jump]
Thanks for your help!
Mary
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Dear Mary,
A-ha! A reversible decor question. We love these.
Armstrong's MiYo tile system, blogged here by AT:LA, was created for just this type of situation. We haven't used it ourselves so can't describe it in detail, but the color options and patterns are fun, and it is said to be an easy install.
Has anyone out there tried MiYo? Any drawbacks Mary would want to know about?
Anyone else?
I have the same problem only the floor is ugly, old sheet vinyl. Any suggestions for me too? I was considering Eco Sources' Rubber tiles. Any thoughts?
view *kat's profile
I'm going to go ahead and recommend Flor tiles here. I know people will take issue with carpet in the bathroom, but it could look really awesome. You can cut them to fit your floor exactly AND they are easy to remove.
http://www.florcatalog.com
view SFAmanda's profile
I once Astroturfed a bathroom. Gave it sort of a Brian Murphy look.
view spinsLPs's profile
I had a rental kitchen with awful floors once and we taped together pieces of poster board (some plastic would work better for a bathroom) and then cut the whole thing to size to cover the floor wall to wall. We then put the peel and stick tiles over that. Since it was cut to fit the whole room and the tiles had enough weight to them it laid flat and you never knew it wasn't fully installed.
view amy (rustyletter)'s profile
I'd also recommend FLOR tiles - the 'toy poodle' line is meant for bathrooms/wet areas.
view Sea's profile
Thanks for all the ideas so far! I think I'm going to look into the Flor and also the rubber options. Just staring at the brown grout everyday is painful. =)
~Mary
view serena424's profile
buy a sheet of linoleum and cut it to size (or maybe use a paper template)
view meredith's profile
Thanks, Lisa. I checked out the Miyo flooring and we've ordered some samples. Looks simple enough and at a great price. When all is said and done we'll send you pictures of the update!
~Mary
view serena424's profile
We had a similar situation in an old apartment, but worse. It was lovely mustard yellow vinyl tile with odd flowers on them. So 70s but in a very bad way I was finishing up school and we would be moving in a year.
We used rubber matting from an fitness supply co. The type that goes in a fitness center weight area. It was fairly cheap and came in a wide range of colors. We order a sheet slightly bigger than what we needed cut it to size and caulked around the edges. It worked great. Was antimicrobial, easy to clean and felt cushy under your feet. When we moved out we pulled it up and there was no mold underneath. We actually used to help cushion things when we were packing up!
view cdb's profile
snap deck makes a line of interlocking tiles both wood and ceramic that can be installed and removed easily.
I have a set of 76 that I have moved from the front porch to the back deck then back again....look great and easy to maintain.
view hdtex's profile
I suggest a sisel rug, and whatever space isn't covered by the rug uses smooth river rock to fill in - beautiful, practice, cost efficient and as temporary or permanent of a solution as you'd like..
view gogochunks's profile
Re-grout it. It's so easy - we did this in our old bathroom. All you have to do is just scrape out the old grout because it's probably old enough to just flake off. Then just regrout with white and it's almost like a new floor. Another option is to use a grout pen, which is a special device used to change dark grout to light. Trust me, it really works! Good luck!
view design milk's profile
I second the suggestion to re-grout. Head to Home Depot for advice and supplies, and that is an easy makeover. Since the space is small, it won't take that long either.
Or just put a bigger rug over it... the space looks big enough for a 3x5 or 4x6? rug... that will cover the majority of the floor nicely. You can add color, texture or other elements via the rug; and you can find throw rugs that are cute and very inexpensive many places.
My bathroom setup is identical to yours as far as sink/vanity, toilet and tub placement. I put a 3x5' rug in sea colors to hide the yellowish vinyl sheet flooring, instant makeover.
view Guest's profile
My mate's having the same problem at the moment. He owns his joint but can't afford much. He's dealing with jigsaw-like tiles. 4 different shapes that interlock and the worst part... they are each a different shade of lavender... he's painted the rest of his lavender room (the walls, the vanity, the sink, bathtub, shower) but the tiles on the floor are harder to work with because they have a weird patterned texture on them... suggestions that are more permanent very welcome!
view venus_thames's profile
amy/rustyletter-
i like your idea! i'm moving to a newly renovated apt, but the new kitchen floors are horrendous. was trying to think of ways to save them...
http://www.duskin-ny.blogspot.com
view alotlikeotherpeople's profile