OK, it's taken me a while to actually document the painful progress on our concrete floor project. It's disappointing... not what we expected. The concrete grinding is good in theory, but definitely much more dirty than we thought.
Here's the docu-drama:
In the beginning, we removed the carpet in the atrium to reveal a pristine cement floor. But, it looked too new for our mid-century home. We looked at many options and finally decided to grind it down smooth to expose the aggregate stone, then seal it.
We contracted with a concrete company that quoted $2/sq. ft. Fantastic! Our atrium is about 250 sq. ft. so $500.00 is right in the budget.
Prep: We did not have the glass install in the atrium yet, so we bought a roll of plastic ($2.99) and sealed off the atrium to minimize the dust in the rest of the house.
Grinding day 1: No concrete guy! No show... where is he. "Oops, forgot!"
Red flag #1! -Steve
Next week.
Grinding day 2: No concrete guy! Now what? "Not done with my other project."
Red flag #2! -Steve
Another week goes by.
Grinding day 3: Arrived at 8:30 to a city work crew tearing up the water main in front of my house... NO ACCESS to my house! The concrete guy rescheduled for the next day.
Couldn't be helped. We had no idea the city would pick that day to block off our little street and fix a leaky water valve thing. Bummer. -Steve
Grinding day 4: Finally, the grinding begins. He calls me mid project with a NEW QUOTE... $8/sq. ft. And if that wasn't shocking enough... he estimated the size of our atrium at 400 sq. ft.... EQUALS... $3200.
You are done. Just clean up and leave.
What the... What kind of business makes a quote, does a crappy job then mid-project says it'll cost triple their original quote to do what they said they would do in the first place?!! Final red flag! -Steve
The house is a mess when I get there. Apparently, he opened the plastic to get access to the breaker box... tracked concrete dust through the house, and then left the plastic open.
DUST EVERYWHERE!
Three weeks later we are STILL sweeping up concrete dust. Not happy! -Steve
The floor is smooth... but little to no aggregate is showing.
It couldn't get any worse... or could it?
Oh, I could make it worse.... -Steve
Solution 1: We decide to just stain and seal the concrete. I buy the stain/sealer and leave it for Steve to apply. He calls me when it's done and says two words... "it's dark!"
I thought it looked dark at Lowes, but Haley's the color guru. I applied it with a garden sprayer and no... it wasn't right! -Steve
I arrive home to see a CHALKBOARD BLACK floor! Huh? Thought I bought a dark grey...
Solution 2: Let's just go over it with a light grey... Huh? Now we have a weird chemical reaction... looks like concrete on an acid trip.
What the....?!! It went down just fine, but as it started to dry these goofy, swirly, hippie-inspired blotchie things started to appear as we just stood there. It was horrifying. -Steve
Solution 3: Let's roll it out. Now it looks like we painted the floor with grey paint. Huh?
I hated those swirlie thingies! So I let it dry a bit, then reached as far as I could with a roller. I actually rolled up my pants, took off my shoes (amist Haley's Huck Finn wise cracks) and walked on the stuff to roll by the front door. I still have grey stained feet... -Steve
Solution 4: I start to SPONGE PAINT. Bad idea. The last thing we want is a faux finish, and I'm not big on craft projects.
Nope... not a good look either. I thought the sponges might soak up and even things out some. Nope. Just looked like a HGTV project gone horribly wrong. -Steve
Solution 5: Steve lightly sprays the black stain over the grey. It is speckled... not what we initially wanted, but it will work for now.
Well... I think it photographs better than it looks in person, but it'll have to do for now. I'm hoping once the planting beds and stuff get added, the focus won't be on the floor anymore. It's not horrible, but not what we wanted either. AND it cost way to much $. -Steve
I am officially off this project. At this point I don't trust any of my decision making skills when it comes to the atrium floor. Steve will most likely tackle it again in the near future.
Oh great... now it'll be my fault. I think I'll start saving my $$ and get a DIFFERENT concrete grinding company to come do the job right. -Steve
Note: Actual square footage of the atrium = 245 sq. ft.
Those guys were idiots. If you want to know their name, leave us a comment and we'll warn you about them! -Steve