U
Unregistered
Hello,
Thanks in advance for help, wonder if I can get some advice.
I wanted to tile the concrete kitchen floor in my newly bought 1950s house. Under the lino (but not under the units) I've come across some thin blue plastic'y brittle tiles with a thin bitumen layer on the back. This left a residue on the floor with the one tile I tried to lift.
From what I can gather, these are thermoplastic tiles, and I'm reading scare stories on the internet that they could have had asbestos in them.
Obviously I'd use a mask to remove any such tiles, but is this still too risky? I've tiled smaller areas in other houses before but don't really want to mess up my first kitchen ... although the thought of sticking with lino makes me cringe.
If safe to remove the tiles, should I try to clear the residue as much as possible (how?) and then cover with a priming layer (BAL Bond or something similar?)
Many thanks for your time, much appreciated.
Glen
Thanks in advance for help, wonder if I can get some advice.
I wanted to tile the concrete kitchen floor in my newly bought 1950s house. Under the lino (but not under the units) I've come across some thin blue plastic'y brittle tiles with a thin bitumen layer on the back. This left a residue on the floor with the one tile I tried to lift.
From what I can gather, these are thermoplastic tiles, and I'm reading scare stories on the internet that they could have had asbestos in them.
Obviously I'd use a mask to remove any such tiles, but is this still too risky? I've tiled smaller areas in other houses before but don't really want to mess up my first kitchen ... although the thought of sticking with lino makes me cringe.
If safe to remove the tiles, should I try to clear the residue as much as possible (how?) and then cover with a priming layer (BAL Bond or something similar?)
Many thanks for your time, much appreciated.
Glen