Maintaining New Home Floors
Posted: Friday, November 27, 2009
by Joe Samson
A large number of newer homes have been built with various hard flooring in them instead of carpets; buyers love the rich classic look that hardwood, stone tiles, or ceramic tile contributes to a home. However, many new home owners have never experienced these types of floors before and are unsure about how to keep them in good shape. Keeping a hard floor in good shape is not difficult but needs to be taken care of pretty much every day depending on how much grit your family tracks in the house.
Make sure that if you're using mats inside the entrances of your home or other rugs placed on the floors that you vacuum them well so that dirt doesn't make its way through them and scratch the floor when people walk on them. Small rugs can easily be moved and vacuumed underneath periodically.
To wash any hard surface floors use either a very well wrung out mop or a dry steam cleaner that heats water up to 260 degrees. A steam cleaner is preferable to cleaning with a mop due to the lesser amount of water that it uses, thereby being less likely to cause any water damage to the floor. Due to the high heat that this system heats water to, it works well at removing dirt and sticky residues from your floor and killing bacteria as well.
For other types of scratches and floor damage on softer flooring or on flooring that has a sealant coating on it, avoid dragging furniture on the floor and avoid wearing your shoes in the house, particularly high heels. All furniture should sit either on a rug or have soft pads installed on the bottoms of the legs.
Maintaining the floors in your new home shouldn't be a big chore. If you take a few minutes every day to sweep up and a few more each week to vacuum or mop, your floors should keep looking beautiful for years to come.
For information about Calgary property listings, visit JoeSamson.com. The site is an excellent resource for searching Calgary real estate NE.
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