Pergo flooring provides a wide range of residential flooring, with a focus on providing the warm feel of hardwood. With Pergo flooring, homeowners can have a great looking floor that won’t suffer from water damage or abrasions. Laminate flooring takes very little upkeep, and will stay looking great for many years. The latest Pergo flooring replicates all the familiar quirks of a hardwood floor. Visitors will be hard pressed to know the difference between Pergo flooring and real hardwood or tile.
In addition to its great looking and lasting appeal, laminate flooring is incredibly simple to lay down. With its interlocking tiles, Pergo flooring is simple enough to install without any professional assistance. The tiles are manufactured with a tongue and groove system that allows the tiles to interlock without glue or other industrial adhesives. Provided a home installer has a tile cutting tool, installation should take very little effort. Interlocking Pergo flooring is also easier on the environment, without any of the harmful chemical adhesives that other floors possess.
Home installation is simple enough for anyone at least a little handy to accomplish, and can save a great deal of money in professional work fees. Pergo flooring is safer and healthier without the adhesives seen in many other types of flooring. Once a Pergo flooring is installed, it typically lasts for many years. Worn out and damaged tiles can be individually removed and replaced. Laminate flooring will not suffer in the same way from water damage and abrasion as hardwood. A hardwood will bow and bend over time when exposed to water. Cupping and crowning results from extended moisture exposure. This moisture can come both from spills and from water that wicks up from the subfloor, making prevention difficult.
Pergo flooring is superior to carpet as well, offering both comfort and reliability that the former cannot. Carpet can soak up water and stains, making it difficult to keep clean. Over time, carpet can end up absorbing odors that stick around. Laminate flooring keeps out these kinds of smells, remaining in perfect condition for years. Carpet, by contrast, will gradually become torn and dingy. A torn or frayed carpet must inevitably be replaced entirely, whereas laminate tiles can be individually fixed.









