Slab-Compatible Flooring
Slab-compatible flooring is engineered to install directly over concrete slab subfloors — the construction foundation of nearly every Florida home and most commercial spaces in our region. This requires dimensional stability that solid hardwood cannot provide. Engineered hardwood and waterproof vinyl both solve the slab problem with different techniques, and both are represented across the Residence Supply program.
Why Solid Hardwood Doesn't Work Over Concrete
Solid hardwood is one piece of wood from top to bottom. It moves uniformly with humidity, which is fine in cooler, drier regions but unreliable over concrete slabs in subtropical climates. The floor will crown (peak at seams) or cup (dip at seams) within months. This is the central reason Residence Supply does not sell solid hardwood.
How Engineered Construction Solves the Slab Problem
Engineered hardwood has a real wood veneer bonded to a multi-layer cross-grain core. Each layer of the core runs perpendicular to the one above, which keeps the plank dimensionally stable through humidity and temperature changes. All five Residence Supply hardwood collections — Sierra, Westvale, Aurelia, Hudson, and Belmont — are engineered specifically for slab installation.
How Waterproof Vinyl Handles Slabs
Vinyl SPC, WPC, and Dune Collection waterproof vinyl are all slab-compatible. Rather than gluing to the slab, vinyl floats over a 6mm polyfilm moisture barrier underlayment. The barrier manages the hydrostatic moisture that rises out of concrete daily. Vinyl is the right choice for below-grade installations like basements, where glue-down hardwood is not recommended.
The Slab Installation Process for Hardwood
- Concrete moisture testing is performed first using calibrated meters
- An adhesive is selected based on detected moisture levels
- The slab is leveled and cleaned
- Engineered hardwood is glued plank-by-plank to the slab
- A typical 1,500 to 2,500 square foot home takes about two days to install
Why Moisture Testing Matters
Hydrostatic moisture rises out of concrete daily, and an adhesive not matched to the moisture levels can fail years after installation, leading to delamination, cupping, and replacement costs. Skipping the test is never worth the savings.
Climate and Reliability
Florida's subtropical climate means concrete maintains a consistent moisture profile year-round, and indoor humidity stays moderate. Engineered hardwood and waterproof vinyl both perform reliably across these conditions in ways solid wood cannot.