Armstrong Flooring Logo

Armstrong Flooring

Is This Your Business?
star star star star star_border
LAST UPDATED: March 2nd, 2023

Top Ranked Companies

Was this content helpful?
thumb_up Yes thumb_down No

Star Rating

4.0

star star star star star_border

6 Reviews

Review Breakdown

5 grade

33%

4 grade

33%

3 grade

33%

2 grade

0%

1 grade

0%

Sentiment Criteria

Value

star star star star star_half

Quality

star star star star star_half

Service

star star star star star_half

Trustworthiness

star star star star star_half
cancel

Filter by:

arrow_drop_down

Sort by:

arrow_drop_down
info
check_circle

Review Source

star star star star star_border

David Garrett Bloomington, IN

The Armstrong flooring tiles I put in the kitchen, utility room and bathroom of my present home have worn fine and have pretty much stayed put in the kitchen (with minor issues by the sink and refrigerator), but many have separated/moved in the other two rooms, especially in the bathroom, where two of them have come up at one corner of each and broken. To fix these issues, it will take a good cleaning, putting the tiles back down w/flooring adhesive, and (I believe) to keep them in place, about four brass brads/sm. nails will have to be hammered into the full tiles.

3 months ago

star star star star star_border

Leonard Leo Potomac, MD

I have installed about 1000 sq ft of Bruce Hardwood, a subsidiary of Armstrong. With any natural product, you are bound to get variations, so allow for 10% waste. With this in mind, variations are fine, but poor milling is another. Ranging from non-square end cuts, tapered slats and tongues, these sections are unusable, unless you recut them yourself. This definitely slows down the installation time. Overall, Bruce is a good product is readily available.

2 years ago