Hicksville, N.Y.—With the glueless laminate segment having grown so quickly
recently—almost 100% of the laminate market is now glueless after only three
years—many in the industry were eager to find out how glueless wood might do.
The answer so far? Not nearly as well as its laminate counterpart, at least not
initially, but it is headed in the right direction. “It’s a popular product for
us in our line,” said David Wilkerson, Shaw Industries’ vice president of
marketing, hard surfaces, “but I think it is what most people in the industry
would classify as, not necessarily a niche product, but not a mainstream
component of the hardwood business. You’ve got your traditional solid,
traditional engineered, and glueless engineered. It’s certainly the smallest of
those three categories, but for us it’s a pretty important one.
“With glueless laminate, there was an industry perception that the gluing of
laminates was a problem,” he explained. “The vast majority of the installation
issues and of the claims that ultimately resulted when laminate was being sold
and installed, had more to do with glue than anything else, whether it be too
much, not enough or the wrong kind. There was an industry perception that there
needed to be a solution to this problem. “When the industry came out with
glueless laminate, and it worked as well as it did,” added Wilkerson, “there was
just an immediate migration toward that alternative. It was the ‘new and
improved laminate flooring,’ and it just took the marketplace by storm and as
quickly as people could convert from standard glued laminate to glueless
laminate, they did. It was a solution to a problem.
“With hardwood,” he continued, “you’ve had years and years of
experience working with various types of engineered and solid woods, and some
are glued down while others are nailed down. But there is not this immediate
perception of, ‘Gee, I have got a problem getting this product installed.’ And
the majority of consumers who buy it, they do not install it themselves. They
hire an installer. “So,” said Wilkerson, “because the D-I-Y portion of the
market is not as great, and because the industry experience with the product on
the hardwood side had not festered [as it had with laminates], those are two key
reasons why glueless hardwood has not yet had the same type of impact on the
market as glueless laminate has.”
Claus Wennerth, president of Alloc, said, “Glueless wood is growing, but it
is not growing as fast as the laminates, obviously, but it is growing.
Do-it-yourselfers especially seem to really like it. Some of the professional
installers are sticking to the traditional staple guns and glue. The
do-it-yourselfers have really liked the product as it is much easier for them to
install than buying a staple gun and those types of things. I think it is going
to have a nice pickup “The reason glue-less wood has not grown as fast as
glueless laminate is, primarily, installation-related,” he explained.
“The glued laminate floors were laborious and full of problems, with the glue
not functioning the way it should, etc. When it comes to hardwood flooring, the
installation with the staple gun is very fast, quite effective and works very
well. So, the speed advantage with having a locking system versus gluing and
stapling is less in hardwood than in laminate.” Wennerth, who reported double
digit growth for the company’s glueless wood products, albeit not as much as
with its laminate offerings, said, “with laminates, you glued the seams and you
had a pretty complicated process. You had the glue on top of the surface; it was
a real mess. However, the speed and efficiency with which you can staple
together wood flooring is quite impressive.
“Another reason for the slower growth in glueless wood may be that the
installers are a little bit more conservative in the wood segment than they were
in laminates,” he explained, “where many of them came out of carpet and other
areas, got into a new sector and were, you could say, taught from the beginning.
Primarily, stapling is the method many of them prefer and that has a high speed,
of course, and that’s an advantage for them. The locking systems are faster but
not as much faster as they were with the laminates, in comparison.” “The
assumption that, with engineered wood being so popular and with the advent of
glueless, the two would go hand-in-hand, is one many would make,” said
Wilkerson.
“But, so much of the wood used in the marketplace is used in new
construction, and the builders, as a general rule, are very slow to change. Had
there been a perception these traditional hardwood floors, whether they be
engineered or solid, were too difficult to install, there would be a tendency on
the part of the builder to look elsewhere. “But,” he added, “because they are
not of the opinion today that the product cannot be installed satisfactorily, I
don’t think the builders are as inclined to look for alternative installation
methods and I believe that is why the vast majority of what we sell today in
glueless hardwood is for residential replacement.”
Wilkerson noted he anticipates that the glueless segment would continue to
grow at a steady, if not slower pace as its laminate counterpart. “I would said
that today, it is less than 10% of the business. But I do feel like as more
people get experience in selling it and as the variety of products offered
increases in the standpoint of visuals and constructions, there will be more
choices for the consumer. “Therefore,” he concluded, “the consumer will buy it
with more frequency, but I don’t see it as something that overtakes or replaces
conventional engineered flooring, and today, glueless is just available in
engineered constructions.” —Louis Iannaco