Strand-woven bamboo — two to four times harder than oak, renewable in six years, suited to residential and light commercial floors.
Bamboo flooring isn't a soft alternative to hardwood. Modern strand-woven construction compresses bamboo fibres under high pressure into a board that consistently rates between 3,000 and 5,000 on the Janka hardness scale — compared to red oak at around 1,290 and white oak at 1,360. The result is a floor that resists dents, scratches, and chair-castor traffic more effectively than most domestic hardwoods, in a board that uses a stalk that regrows to harvestable maturity in five to six years rather than the fifty to eighty years required for oak.
For specifiers and homeowners choosing between hardwood, engineered timber, and bamboo, the comparison usually comes down to three things: how the floor performs under traffic, how it reads in the space, and what the supply story is. Bamboo wins on the first, holds its own on the second, and has the strongest renewable-resource credentials of the three.
Family homes and apartments · Open-plan living and kitchens · Hallways and high-traffic residential zones · Light commercial fit-outs (offices, boutique retail, hospitality) · Underfloor-heated installations · Projects with sustainability or renewable-material targets.
142 mm wide strand-woven boards with a super-matte finish. The wider plank format suits contemporary interiors where the floor reads as a single continuous surface rather than a series of narrow strips.
Additional ranges, colourways, and finishes available on request.