


Looks very nice so far! I love the galvanized coting and paint color. Nice tile choice,mtoo.
He's doing it the right way, starting at the joint and working back. I wasn't as confident in my ability to get the tiles cut at the Schluter Ramp if the joint and the door edge weren't parallel. So, I started at the door and cut the joint tiles square.
You are gonna have one upscale garage! Great if you need to entertain and the weather looks "iffy!"
I took my iPad over to the tile folks at Home Depot to show them what I used all their tile for. The lady said tiled garages are getting very popular with lots of questions about tile types and choices. She had never seen one completed before.
Looking good! Coming along very nicely.
Between Pay2Play and Dakota00, I'm taking notes for my own garage. Looking good.
Looking great! If you don't mind my asking - how much was the tile per square foot? I'm considering it for my garage (versus epoxy).
Thanks!
EDIT: What color grout are you going to use?
Looking great! I'm about to start my double garage and keep changing my mind on tile colours as i'm trying to avoid the standard plain grey effect. Definitely looking forward to seeing the finished pics!
Looking great! Should be a fantastic floor for whatever you want to do in there. Can't wait until I get to the point to put mine down.
Which raises a question. I see he's honoring the lengthwise joint the full length but it looks like he's tiling right over the perpendicular joint (assuming widthwise). From a guy who doesn't profess to know all the answers, just curious to know if that's a problem?
Cheers.
Angelfire,
The prevailing wisdom among tile pros is, as long as you are within 6" of a concrete joint, any cracking should migrate through the mortar, usually along the mortar/concrete or mortar tile joint and end up at the grout line. In other words, the tile won't break but a small section of the tile will become unfastened from the floor. The only way you'll know is a crack may show up in the groutline and the tile may sound "hollow" when struck. In the future, you could always pull a hard grout product out of that area and replace it with something color-matched that is flexible. Or, just re-grout it.
I had a "wandering" expansion joint that wasn't straight nor parallel in my garage. As it turned out, my tile joint was a couple inches past the joint so I did the same thing this installer did: I tiled over the joint.
As long as you are within 6", you should be good. Hope that helps.
For "new" builders, its super handy if your concrete guys suspend rebar in the areas they plan to saw cut. That ensures when the concrete cracks, the two slabs will be "pinned" to each other, minimizing movement.
Ray
The progress so far looks great. Do you have any plans to cover up the block on the bottom of the wall with tile as well?





Looks great!
What is your installer using for a primer?
That looks absolutely spectacular.
10$/sq ft for tile alone is pretty spendy for me, but it looks amazing. I think my family, wife's side are all Michigan country folk, would never let live down spending that much work on a floor.
I know it's stupid pricey, but, I'm just picky about the garage. I want it to be an entertainment space when I'm not parking cars and snowmobiles in there.
The installer hasn't done many garage floors. But, I'm much more confident with this vs an epoxy product for durability and long lasting good looks. I'm doing it for me, and I'm very happy so far!
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Looks amazing especially with the walls and that blue looks killer.
For tile guys is there a way to have the joints flush instead of a dip?
I am considering tile and don't want the clackety clack when rolling everything around.
Also do you have close up of your baseboard trim? Can't tell what it is but looks great
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Schluter makes good stuff but the tile underlayment system is designed for smaller spaces like showers. Using one on a 1000sqft garage would raise the price a bunch and in most applications isn't really necessary, unless you have moving concrete. You can use a membrane like Schluter makes for those areas that look like they might move.
We are three years into a complete renovation of a house. One of the first things I did was to bust up 2500 sqft of Saltillo Mexican tile. Saltillo is plain old clay, the same stuff that flower pots are made of. Saltillo gets a glaze over that but it add zero strength. Its the weakest tile you could imagine installing. The strongest part of the tile is the grout.
While wailing away with my Bosch jackhammer in the entryway, I hit black tar roofing felt. Under the roofing felt was a huge crack in the slab, probably 1/4" wide. With that opportunity for movement, not even the grout had cracked on the tile surface. Nada. The el cheapo roofing felt isolated the el cheapo tile enough that it held up for a decade or more since installation.
When my tile guys installed my porcelain over that area, they first ground the crack level as it was pitched on either side. Then, they used a fabric isolation membrane and some kind of tile glue and basically "fiber-glassed" the crack area, extending past the crack a tile width in every direction. Two years and no sign of cracks...
Custom makes an isolation sealant called RedGard. Widely used in showers, its mostly a water-proofer and an isolation membrane you roll on. I used that on a few little cracks in my workshop then, I used their crack isolation mortar that can accept up to 1/8" movement -and a tad more if set on RedGard.
Porcelain tile is VERY hard to break once you set it in mortar. You can "chip" the glazing on it but, that takes real work. I dropped a five pound tool steel cutter head on my workshop floor and it bounced as high as my hand about five times... that is how hard porcelain is. On one of those bounces, the knife-sharp cutter edge chipped a tiny fleck of the glaze off. It looks like a water drop that dried there. No other damage. Had it been epoxy, every strike would have chipped concrete, though it wouldn't have bounced as much. If it really bugs me, I pop out the tile and replace it and nobody knows.
Some tile has an edge that allows for **** jointing but getting tile paid perfectly without a grout line is VERY difficult. Many tile styles have rounded edges and that makes joints less "clunky" though, there will always be some noise. If it really bugs you, get a jack with nylon wheels. I am sourcing nylon wheels for my floor jacks now and they are available.
Tile has a way or transforming a space. A buddy and his girlfriend saw my garage for the first time last weekend. His girlfriend said, "I could just live in here..."
I am not sure most women would say that about your average garage...
Ray
PS: Your daughter's smile tells me she can't wait to park her Mazda Miata in there when she gets her drivers license!![]()
Looks very nice.
Never would have thought to tile a garage...will it handle floor jacks and dropped tool/parts?
Has anyone ever heard of Schluter products? They've got a product you put down under tile floors to separate the tile from the substrate to prevent cracks. I used it as well as their backer board product when I had my bathroom redone a while back. Pretty cool stuff.
Nate
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