Retrosmith
Well-known member
Saw this today. What would the durability be like in a garage compared to porcelain tile (PEI IV or V) if using pre '82 copper pennies? Supposedly these floors are popular in hotels and restaraunts.


approx 1200buxs in pennies for a 400 sqft garage
And if you don't get the coins glued down without any air space around them, you'll get bubbles.
as to durability, I think the pennies themselves will hold up fine, I'd be more concerned with them being pried loose from the edges with particularly heavy loads rolling over them on small-ish caster wheels, or if something heavy was dragged over them, with a sharp edge.
This is what I was figuring. So it would be roughly 300,000 pennies unless wiser heads prevail.Google is our friend !
Answer:There are 304 pennies in a square foot
My problem would be I would need them all facing the same way.![]()
Got it, thanks. Let me know if you recall another discussion than this one.this has been discussed here before. a search might be helpful
Thanks, using this site as a go-by. They went with CEG lite - a 2 part epoxy thinset/grout.We do plenty of white floors and yellowing only happens when it hasn't been sealed with a proper top coat.
The pennies should be grouted in with something in order to not have a dirt trap.
Thread derail for puns? In for a penny, in for a pound.Boy everybody seems to be putting their two-cents into this thread![]()

Yeah, I know...for a garage too.approx 1200buxs in pennies for a 400 sqft garage
No wheats and no rares if I can find them but they would be pre-82 pennies. So I guess the value would be $5-6/sq.ft. in copper.even putting down rare pennies that could have been sold for hundreds of dollars.




Thanks for all the replies (Puns included). A little background, I'm starting on my garage build. It will be my first, my last, and most importantly, my garage. I want a unique floor. I a big fan of porcelain hex tiles, like this:
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Why would anyone put one of those in a garage? Its a long story but a mid life crisis only comes around once. But with the tile at $4-5/sq ft at the cheapest, a lot of other crazier ideas become possible. Enter the penny floor.
Thanks but I wasn't planning on epoxy. I'd leave them exposed with possibly sealer but I'm ok with the wear and patina on them.
Yes this is my concern also. Time for a 2'x2' test.
This is what I was figuring. So it would be roughly 300,000 pennies unless wiser heads prevail.
Yeah there is that...They would at least have to be heads up.
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Got it, thanks. Let me know if you recall another discussion than this one.
http://garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=115619&highlight=penny+floor
Thanks, using this site as a go-by. They went with CEG lite - a 2 part epoxy thinset/grout.
http://www.glasstileexperts.com/2012/04/you-can-keep-change.html
Does this accomplish the "grouting in" you mention to avoid the dirt trap?
Thread derail for puns? In for a penny, in for a pound.
Yeah, I know...for a garage too.
No wheats and no rares if I can find them but they would be pre-82 pennies. So I guess the value would be $5-6/sq.ft. in copper.

Now that was funny.That doesn't make cents.

