![]() The beaten, scarred floor in McClintock's restaurant at Saguaro Ranch is made from reclaimed pine.
Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star
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Wood floors are backDon't worry: Termites won't be a problem
Special to the Arizona Daily Star
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 09.09.2007
When Stephen Phinny, developer of the ultra-high-end Saguaro Ranch, went looking for floors for his own home in the far Northwest Side enclave, he chose "Sheepwood" — white gum tree boards rescued from 90-year-old wool barns in Western Australia.
Wood flooring already is proving to be a popular choice in the more modestly priced houses that Rammed Earth Development Inc. is building in the Mercado District of Menlo Park. Those dwellings, priced from the high $300,000s, are the first new homes in the Rio Nuevo Downtown Tucson redevelopment plan. "People want wood floors, whenever they can afford them," Rammed Earth President Tom Wuelpern said.
From modest older homes in central Tucson to the booming Northwest Side luxury corridor, hardwood floors are back in fashion. Tucsonans are pulling up carpet to rescue underlying wood floors and are installing hardwood floors in new and remodeled homes.
"I find that I have more people asking for them than ever before in my practice as a designer, and I've been here for nine years," said Juliann Berens, owner of JB Interior Design Inc. "I think it actually started with the bamboo craze, and then people started looking back to wood.
"Wood gives you a lot of bang for your buck with regard to your design," Berens said. "As soon as you put down that wide plank, you've gone a long way in laying the foundation for that hacienda look you are after."
Wait a minute.
Isn't wood supposed to be a big no-no in Tucson? Won't you get cracking and splitting, and happy termites munching and crunching?
Besides, doesn't wood cost a fortune? Not necessarily.
The truth is, Tucson already boasts a large number of wood floors, some as much as a century old. Owen Conniff, who with his wife, Cynndra, owns Catalina Hardwoods, estimates that half of the company's business consists of re-sanding and refinishing usually oak floors in central Tucson neighborhoods. "I probably get 15 calls a week for re-sanding of those floors, and we do approximately two a week," he said.
Hardwood-floor installers offer two solutions to the problems of wood shrinking and expanding — apart from noting that the Tucson climate is extremely stable except during the monsoon.
At Catalina, where the business is focused on traditional plank flooring, the answer is proper acclimation of a floor before you install it. Catalina normally stores wood flooring at a job site for seven to 10 days before beginning to nail. "Get it acclimated, and then you have minimum gaps," Conniff said.
At Aztec Flooring, which is supplying the wood floors in the Mercado District homes, engineered wood flooring is the solution. Engineered flooring consists of a layer of real wood glued to plywood.
Engineered floors are a particularly good idea if you're going for a wide-plank, rustic look. The wider the plank, the more likely the floor will bend or bow. Aztec Vice President Matt Caldwell says he's installing engineered flooring in his new home.
Termites can be avoided by proper installation.
While wood is costly, beginning at $9 a square foot and rapidly ascending to the sky's-the-limit range, it is at least a long-term investment. A traditional plank floor should not need re-sanding and refinishing for 15 to 20 years.
● Rebecca Boren is a local freelance writer.
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