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silverfish11

Replace old brick kitchen floor?

3 years ago

We are buying an old home (1800’s but was fully renovated in 1980s) and will be completely redoing kitchen and bathrooms of the house. The kitchen has an old ( dark) brick kitchen floor (Also brick on the walls as well). We don’t find the look of the brick floor warm, but dark and dirty looking. More importanly, husband and I are 65 and both have some back and knee issues. We are thinking of taking out the brick floor and replacing with a wood one. For those of you who have actually lived with brick kitchen floors, do you agree? i’m told they would need to be jack hammered up,


Comments (68)

  • 3 years ago

    Wonder if you could have electric radiant heat put under whatever flooring you add. Love the warmth underfoot.

    colleen stanton thanked mimimomy
  • PRO
    3 years ago

    It would be criminal to destroy that historic fabric. Find a way to cover that's reversible please.

  • 3 years ago

    floor was put in in 1960- d think thats considered historic?

  • 3 years ago

    Thank you all your responses have been very helpful! what a wonderful group of responses! I love this community and I promise to post a picture of the finished kitchen… It may take awhile…!

  • PRO
    3 years ago
    last modified: 3 years ago

    colleen, it's not historic. Take it out. If you don't do it now, and you get everything else done and move itn, having to demo that brick will be a complete and utter mess. you'll be cleaning dust for weeks.

    Bite the bullet, remove it. no one wants to walk on hard, cold, uneven brick from the 60's, and have to clean up old grime from those mortar joints!

  • 3 years ago

    Time for hardwood! Would love to see your renovated kitchen! Please keep us posted.

  • 3 years ago

    Not brick but we have saltillo everywhere and im only in my 30s but i do the cooking and they are murder on my back. if it was up to me id never work in a litchen with hard floors like that.

    colleen stanton thanked fatherdowling
  • PRO
    3 years ago

    I would definitely loose the brick now. Installed in the 60's? Hard to know exactly how it was installed but it MIGHT not be easy to remove. Do it anyway while you are not living there and under construction. It won't be good on your body and it isn't anything "priceless" to keep.

    colleen stanton thanked Dragonfly Tile & Stone Works, Inc.
  • 3 years ago
    last modified: 3 years ago

    “It would be criminal to destroy that historic fabric.”

    @Joseph Corlett, LLC - Criminal? Really? Some 1960s brick that is hard, cold, nearly impossible to wipe and keep clean, and dangerous to fall on for homeowners aging in place? Why is 1960s brick so precious? It’s brick. It’s not ”historic fabric” like, say, a 1800s walnut millwork, or stunning marble, or artistic plaster work, or even 1960s MCM. It’s not unique, special or irreplaceable. You can get the same brick today.

    @colleen stanton - I think @Beth H. : made a great point - remove it now while you are having other work done. Also while you aren’t living there as you said. If you keep that brick floor you will regret it in the future, but won’t have such a great opportunity as you have now to remove it.

    colleen stanton thanked M Miller
  • 3 years ago

    @M Miller I agree with you.


    @colleen stanton You might be sorry if you keep it. I don't think you'll be sorry if you replace it. You will love a beautiful, new, flat, easy to clean floor. Get a couple of bids from the best people you can find.


    Having it done while you live there will be inconvenient to your lives, so best to do it now.

    colleen stanton thanked socks
  • PRO
    3 years ago

    I can’t speak to living with brick floors but I’m working with two clients right now who are removing brick floors. Luckily in both cases they were dry set so came right out. Even in your case a crew of guys will have it out in no time. Do it now.

    colleen stanton thanked HALLETT & Co.
  • 3 years ago
    last modified: 3 years ago

    I would strongly recommend removing the floor. It's uneven and NOT a good surface. Some brick floors are flat, this is not. Please do NOT place throw rugs. They are a very common cause of falls as people age. All rugs need to have edges essentially fixed to the floor.

    I'm younger than you and there is no way in hell I would ever stand on brick floors for any length of time.

    colleen stanton thanked Anna (6B/7A in MD)
  • 3 years ago

    I would keep the brick. At this point, its been in the house for over 80 years… it definitely deserves to be considered as part of the house’s history.

  • 3 years ago
    last modified: 3 years ago

    "its been in the house for over 80 years… it definitely deserves to be considered as part of the house’s history."

    @Hillside House - the OP said the brick has been there since the 1960s. Mathematics say that is not "over 80 years". Furthermore, read this thread and the many reasons listed in it for not keeping the brick. Weigh them against your reason of "part of the house's history" from the 1960s. If that were a good reason, none of the houses from the 1960s would be renovated or updated.

  • 3 years ago

    Tripping hazard. Remove it.

  • 3 years ago
    last modified: 3 years ago

    Sorry for my quick reading/math error, shannon-wi.

    I did read the thread. I saw others’ opinions. I have a different one, and I gave it to the OP, like they asked. My opinion is valid, as is yours.

    FURTHERMORE, if you don’t like my opinion, feel free to ignore it and move on. Tagging me to argue about it is weird, particularly when this isn’t the first time you’ve done it. Quit being weird.

  • 3 years ago

    @Hillside House - people tagging others is an internet standard. It is not weird. People tag someone to indicate that they are responding to that person's comment. If you feel it's weird to tag others on an internet forum, you should mention that to every person who tags another on Houzz or any other social media. It's funny that you find tagging weird.

  • 3 years ago

    I find you repeatedly tagging me - while ignoring others in this thread who also think OP should keep the brick - weird.


  • 3 years ago

    We live in an 18th century house that has wood floors in the kitchen and brick floors in the adjacent breakfast room. Like most people, our lives tend to coalesce in the kitchen and breakfast room. The brick floors are not in as good shape (lots of spalling) as yours are, and we are currently investigating options for refurbishing them, which may not be possible given the extent of the damage, or replacing them. Originally, we thought we would have to replace them with reclaimed wood floors, but have come to the conclusion that we would miss the beauty and the "wow" factor of the bricks, and are investigating high-fired brick veneer (with new radiant floor heating) if refurbishment doesn't work out. Does anyone have experience with finding professionals to refinish brick floors? Personally, I don't find the brick floors particularly hard (brick is not as hard as tile). If I did find them hard, I would probably put down a couple of those heavy industrial cushioned mats with sloped edges in front of work areas to avoid a tripping hazard. My husband and I are both 64, and have lived in the house for 30+ years; perhaps if I didn't have the history with the brick floor, I might feel differently.

    colleen stanton thanked CarolineK
  • 3 years ago

    I had 1,000 sf of slate floors removed six months ago when i redid my kitchen and some adjoining areas. I moved into the house and tried to live with those floors but they always looked dirty and the unevenness drove me crazy. My floors had lots of mortar in the joints. Taking them up was not terrible at all. Took a day of jackhammering but they came up easily. Best decision I ever made. I say get rid of them.

    colleen stanton thanked nycbluedevil_gw
  • 3 years ago

    Lovely but dangerous. I'd want heated floors instead, but the best conductor of heat is tile; still not a good option for a future retirement home.

    colleen stanton thanked decoenthusiaste
  • 3 years ago

    Yes, yes yes, yes to heated floors. when we pulled up the slate, we did hydronic heating. High recommend it.

    colleen stanton thanked nycbluedevil_gw
  • 3 years ago

    My parents have what looks like the same brick in their 1970s house. I bet yours is from around the same era. It's ugly and awkward. My parents were told it would be expensive to remove so they have lived with it for 30+ years. I vote to rip it out.

    colleen stanton thanked circonium
  • 3 years ago

    Thanks! the contractor says he’d prefer to rip it up it, it will make it easier to put in gas and water lines! yea!

  • 3 years ago

    When I was 30 we moved into a house that had 11 year old brick for a kitchen floor. It was hard to try and clean it and it never was really clean. I don't remember it being hard on my feet but with 2 under age four I didn't stand still very long in one place. It was ripped out 2.5 years later and I have never ever missed it. Maybe it was jackhammered out--I can't remember and the few days of inconvenience was worth everything. The bit of fireplace shown in your picture looks wonderful.

    colleen stanton thanked Rho Dodendron
  • 3 years ago

    Please post an update when you are ready.

  • 3 years ago

    Definately! We just met with all of the subs - demolition of current cabinets - etc starts next week. So we don’t expect the house to be ready to move in until september. I’ll post before and after photos

  • 2 years ago


    Original kitchen with the dreaded brick floor

  • 2 years ago



  • 2 years ago

    New improved! i do NOT miss that brick floor


  • 2 years ago

    New improved! i do NOT miss that brick floor


  • 2 years ago



    thank you Houzz

  • 2 years ago

    Thank you to the Houzz community for your advice and comments

  • 2 years ago

    Very pretty!!!

  • 2 years ago

    My husband is 65 with back problems (just had an operation) and I have knee issues - so in retrospect, the 1980’s brick floor was not a possible for us.

    The wood floor blends seamlessly with the rest of the hardwood floors on the first floor. Plus the kitchen is so much lighter and cleaner looking. It was much easier to get them out than I thought. We also removed a 1980’s non working brick fireplace. It gave us room for an early in banquet. Heaven! So nice to have a place to sit in the kitchen. Cushions are being made for more comfortable seating.

  • 2 years ago

    What a beautiful home you have. So happy to read you made the right decision for yourself.

  • 2 years ago

    Collen: You "after" pictures take my breath away! Gorgeous! Love that charming breakfast nook. The house looks even more historically accurate now, your renovation is faithful to the character of your home. Regarding your cabinets, what color are they painted? Thank you and congratulations on a beautiful remodel.

  • 2 years ago

    Can you describe more about how the brick was taken out and how they put the new floor in, please? The new kitchen is beautiful.

  • 2 years ago

    Beautiful results. What type of wood is the new floor?

  • 2 years ago

    Wow, beautiful transformation! Not only the brick floor, but your entire kitchen is really beautiful.

  • 2 years ago

    Pine. Which is the same as dining room and living room. You can’t tell the old wood from the new (I keep looking to try to see a color difference and can’t find one).

  • 2 years ago

    They jack hammered the old brick out. And there was a subfloor they were able to put the new wood down over. We had the entire house floors sanded and stained and sealed at the same time. The floor guys used different stains ( or clear stain) and were able to have the color uniform though out the house.

    What was really impressive is the upstairs bath was black marble floor with 2 inches of cement under it (2 inches!!). Under the cement was the original pine floors from 1800s. The demo team was able to get the marble and cement up and leave the original hardwood floors. After sanding and staining -they look fabulous. Never thought I’d love hardwood floors in a master bath - but I do!

  • 2 years ago

    Thank you for your kind words. I’m sort of color obsessed and spent a lot of time on deciding walls and cabinet colors. The kitchen cabinets are Ben Moore vale mist #1494. Wood trim though out house is all Ben Moore White dove #OC-17.

  • 2 years ago

    Thank you Colleen!

  • 2 years ago
    last modified: 2 years ago

    I love what you did

    That brick did not look original or in keeping of the old house, and I love how you did an up to date reno while keeping the flavor of the old...

    I probably would have kept the fireplace, but what you did is so much smarter and more practical

  • 2 years ago

    It’s so elevated - I love your choices. I’m sure you’ll be happy in it and your knees & back with thank you.

  • 5 months ago

    The wood floors look beautiful!

    How long did it take to jackhammer the floor? Did you get a brick company to remove and the approximate price?



  • 5 months ago

    The wood floors look beautiful!

    How long did it take to jackhammer? Did you hire a brick company and the approximate price to remove?

  • 4 months ago

    I know this is years old, but that looks like an Ilve range I've had my eye on -- is it? Do you like it? Has it held up well?