Design flooring Disano by Haro

  • Erstellt am 2017-07-11 13:02:00

DerZert

2017-07-11 13:02:00
  • #1
Hello everyone,

we are currently looking for a suitable floor and have stumbled over pretty much everything available on the market. Solid wood parquet and laminate were quickly ruled out for various reasons. Vinyl is currently very popular, but of course there are questions about harmful substances and the quality of the texture. We were recently offered the Disano design floor from Haro, which "is said to" have the positive properties of a vinyl floor but without any harmful substances, and is also supposed to be very appealing in terms of texture.

Is there anyone who has this floor, knows it, or has given it more intensive thought and maybe can make comparisons to other products?

Thanks everyone.

Best regards
 

Marvinius II

2017-08-05 22:57:51
  • #2
Just googled it. So for this price, we get great parquet from a large Frankfurt parquet distributor, which is custom-made in the living area according to our requirements. Since we are installing parquet in almost the entire house including the basement, the price for the overall package was really good.
 

Curly

2017-08-06 11:12:24
  • #3
we have taken a look at the floor from Disano, however, I cannot detect any difference in the surface compared to laminate and laminate is cheaper. I like the Designboden Premium Tecara DD 350 S from Meister and the Purline Bioboden 1000 from Wineo. The surfaces of these floors feel softer and are more matte, the one from Meister is really matte.

Best regards
Sabine
 

Maria16

2017-08-06 11:44:15
  • #4
I don't know if your question also aims at this: but a salesperson told us that design flooring is better than vinyl for children's rooms (because of harmful substances; even if they are few, in case of illness one would always wonder if the floor contributed to it...) However, it is not suitable for bathrooms; there, due to moisture, "normal" vinyl is needed. That was just general information – whether that also applies to Haro for bathrooms, you would need to check.
 

Nordlys

2017-08-06 11:49:40
  • #5
I think they are just trying to confuse you. Every design floor is vinyl-based, polyvinyl chloride. Only they avoid the abbreviation PVC like the devil avoids holy water. Everyone needs plasticizers. There are always some in it. Right? Karsten
 

Curly

2017-08-06 14:11:11
  • #6


The mentioned floors are all PVC-free.

Best regards
Sabine
 

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