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TileVault: Wood Tiles at Savoy

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What: Wood 2x4 Tiles (cedar?)
Where: Savoy Restaurant on Prince & Crosby
Why: These wood tiles look like they were a DIY when they restaurant was designed and they give a funky and warmer look than ceramic or glass. Wood tiles are unusual in NYC and hard to find...

 
 

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but they are easy to make. Covered with polyurethane, they are as durable as regular wood floors, but much more spa-like and organic in their ability to show off the grain of the wood in repetitious pattern.

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Comments (5)

These kinds of floors are often referred to as "wood block" or "end grain" floors and were popular as industrial flooring because the vertical wood grain is much more durable/strong. While they are very attractive, they are much more susceptible to water damage..the various blocks will shrink and expand over time with water/weather extremes and you will be left with a very uneven floor!

posted by Aaron on 2007-11-26 14:22:55
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The new Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum in Nashville (designed by Tuck Hinton) features this type of wood block floor throughout the event spaces. It seems to be covered with tons of clearcoat. The company who installed it says that this type of wood block was used on streets and bridges in the past. Check out photos 1-3 on this page:

http://www.kaswell.com/woodblock/so_yell_pine.htm

posted by nashvegas on 2007-11-26 15:04:53
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the floors in the lutwidge museum of modern art in coln, germany have these floors. theirs look better though, and i am in love with them.

our street was actually done in wood block like this back in the day. instead of cobblestones showing through the pavement where there are potholes, we have wood blocks.

posted by erin n on 2007-11-26 15:46:20
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the Coach store at 63rd and Madison had these floors too- I think they are closed now, but it looked good with all the leather

posted by davit on 2007-11-26 17:15:41
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Also in Germany, Munich to be exact, at the Nymphenburg Palace you can find the same end grain wood floors. Uneven but stunning and going on 200 years old.

posted by erinn on 2007-11-26 17:17:02
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