Journal Pioneer

Avoid common basement finishing mistake

It’s good to retain some slope; it promotes drainage of water

- Steve Maxwell House Works by Canada’s Handiest Man’ Steve Maxwell features DIY tips, how-to videos and tool product reviews.

If you’re planning to finish your basement, you really need to eavesdrop on my advice to a reader named Dunc. He emailed me about his plan to replace basement carpet with laminate installed over manufactur­ed subfloor tiles. That’s a great plan, but Dunc faced a problem that’s also quite common.

“I’ve already installed subfloor tiles in one small area,” Dunc explained to me, “but had to do a lot of shimming to keep the tiles level since the concrete floor has a built-in slope towards the floor drain. The rest of the job is larger, so the amount of slope I need to deal with is unmanageab­le with shims. What should I do?”

The subfloor tiles Dunc is using are common and effective. They usually measure about two feet by two feet square, they have interlocki­ng edges, and a heavy layer of dimpled plastic that raises the tiles off the ground. Bags of plastic shims are sold separately for stabilizin­g the tiles if necessary.

Although floors do need to be flat for laminate flooring to lay down properly, they don’t necessaril­y need to be completely level. A small amount of slope toward a drain won’t affect the laminate as long as the floor has no more than a quarter inch of deviation from flat over a 10-foot diameter.

“Someone at a big box store suggested laying the laminate directly on the concrete using only the manufactur­ers’ thin foam underlay. How well would this accommodat­e the slope?”

Installing any kind of finished floor on concrete without some kind of mould-resistant subfloor is a mistake. Just because a person works at a big box store doesn’t mean they know how to build. Direct installati­on of laminate (and worse yet, carpet) on concrete offers no tolerance for water. If a little leak happens, it’s a big disaster. The air space underneath subfloor tiles, by contrast, provides a surprising amount of grace in the event of leakage. Subfloor tiles also make floors warmer and more comfortabl­e under foot.

Dunc’s trouble with shimming springs from the fact that he mistakenly believed that a finished basement floor needs to be completely level as well as flat, and this led him to an idea that I steered him away from.

“Could I build a subfloor on wood strapping,” Dunc wondered, “varying the thickness of wood strips as needed to create a level surface? I could then put subfloor tiles on top and then the laminate floor? I’d put foam strips underneath the strapping to isolate it from floor dampness.”

Dunc’s idea would get his finished floor level, but it would be a lot of trouble and it would put wood strapping in contact with the concrete and potential moisture that leads to mould. Foam strips wouldn’t stop the wood from rotting. Even if the floor seemed dry, moisture vapour often does rise up through concrete basement floors, triggering mould growth.

The amount of slope toward most basement floor drains is small enough that you don’t need to eliminate it. In fact, it’s good to retain some slope since it promotes the drainage of liquid water if it should ever appear. That said, Dunc might still need to make his floor flatter than it is now. Undulation­s in the floor will make the subfloor tiles wobble, in turn making for a noisy and spongy finished laminate floor. This is where floor levelling compound can help. It comes as a powder that you mix with water into a thin slurry. Pour this mixture onto the floor in low spots and it seeks its own level before hardening. It really works.

Too many basements are finished like above-ground spaces, and that’s why so many basement smell musty. Tackle basement finishing as the unique job it is, and you’ll get great, long-lasting results.

 ?? TYROC ?? This inorganic basement subfloor product is made of magnesium oxide and recycled rubber tires. It’s vital to get finished flooring materials up and off concrete basement floors.
TYROC This inorganic basement subfloor product is made of magnesium oxide and recycled rubber tires. It’s vital to get finished flooring materials up and off concrete basement floors.
 ?? DRICORE ?? Standard subfloor basement tiles like these create a more comfortabl­e basement floor that also resists small amounts of moisture.
DRICORE Standard subfloor basement tiles like these create a more comfortabl­e basement floor that also resists small amounts of moisture.
 ?? STEVE MAXWELL ?? The raised ribs on the underside of this subfloor tile create a thermal break with the concrete basement floor and allow space for small amounts of leaked water to drain away.
STEVE MAXWELL The raised ribs on the underside of this subfloor tile create a thermal break with the concrete basement floor and allow space for small amounts of leaked water to drain away.
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