Remodel Order of Operations
Cabinets before countertops, rough-in before drywall, and one two-week wait you cannot skip. The Florida kitchen remodel sequence, built around the inspection points that actually govern it.
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Pro Work Flooring Editorial
Waterproof ratings, wear-layer mils, PEI wear grades, Janka hardness, and slab MVER numbers — explained for the climate they have to survive. Humidity, slab-on-grade moisture, salt air, and the FBC: the Pro Work Flooring editorial by the install crew that does the work statewide.
400 articles · updated as specs and code change · one crew, flooring to finish.
/// The Latest ///
Material specs that decide whether a floor survives a Florida summer. Waterproof ratings, slab moisture limits, PEI wear grades, and FBC permit reality. The full archive — sorted newest first, filterable by topic and format above.
Cabinets before countertops, rough-in before drywall, and one two-week wait you cannot skip. The Florida kitchen remodel sequence, built around the inspection points that actually govern it.
11 min readRead →
Moving a fixture is really moving its drain. On a Florida slab that means saw-cutting concrete to reach buried pipe, holding a code-minimum slope, and pulling a plumbing permit.
10 min readRead →
Renovation runs structural-to-cosmetic and inside-out — but Florida reorders two steps. Here is the full sequence, from permit before demolition to flooring last, and where the slab and storm season change the plan.
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In a spot-flooding climate the format matters more than the fiber. Here is how a modular tile’s impervious backing lets you swap the wet squares before mold takes hold, where broadloom comes out wholesale.
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Cracked and tented tile in Florida is rarely a bad tile. It is a missing-movement-joint and slab-moisture problem — here is the mechanism, the TCNA EJ171 rule that prevents it, and how to read your own floor.
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A built-in beverage or wine fridge wants its own outlet — kept off the two required small-appliance circuits — plus GFCI and a front-venting body that survives a hot Florida cabinet.
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A Florida claim usually pays actual cash value first and holds the depreciation until you invoice the repair. Here is how ACV, RCV, and the contractor estimate fit together under current Florida law.
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Which kitchen appliances need their own circuit, at what amperage, and why the refrigerator outlet is the one everyone gets wrong — mapped to the NEC as Florida enforces it.
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Particleboard and bare MDF wick water at the toe-kick in Florida bathrooms. Here is how plywood, MDF, and solid-wood frames compare by the spec that decides survival — and why wall-hung wins.
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Hialeah’s 1950s-60s homes hid cast-iron drains and galvanized supply lines in the slab. After 60 years both corrode, so a bath remodel is the moment to slab-cut and re-pipe.
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Most Florida homes have no gas main, so the real choice is induction or radiant electric — both on a dedicated 240V circuit. Here is the wire size, breaker, waste-heat, and hood-makeup-air breakdown.
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A grout-free acrylic surround gives Florida humidity no joints to feed mold but lives or dies by its perimeter seal; a tiled wall is repairable but depends on the membrane behind it. Here is the spec-by-spec call.
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Page 28 of 34 · 400 articles total
Browse by Format
Every Pro Work Flooring article is built around one format. Comparisons for material selection, buying guides for specs, code explainers for permits, and how-to playbooks for the step-by-step of a Florida install.
Editor's Picks
If you read three Pro Work Flooring articles before you pick a floor for a Florida home, read these: the waterproof-flooring breakdown for humidity, the slab moisture testing every install depends on, and the porcelain-versus-ceramic call by PEI wear grade.
By Service Silo
Every silo surfaces its most recent article here. Click the silo name to drop into the full set of services; click the latest article to read it.
Browse by Silo
Each silo has its own set of articles and service guides. Pick the one that matches your project — every link below leads to the full silo with services, specs, and FAQs.
01
Waterproof LVP and rigid-core SPC for humidity, engineered wood acclimation, slab moisture testing, polished concrete, carpet, and refinishing.
Read Flooring →02
Porcelain vs ceramic by PEI wear grade and water absorption, natural stone, mosaics, backsplashes, regrouting, and TCNA-detailed shower tile.
Read Tile →03
Waterproof wet-room assemblies, walk-in and tub-to-shower conversions, ANSI-rated membranes, vanities, and accessible bath layouts.
Read Bathrooms →04
Full and small kitchen remodels, islands, pantries, backsplashes, lighting, and open-concept layouts coordinated with flooring and counters.
Read Kitchens →05
Quartz vs granite for Florida kitchens, quartzite, marble, butcher block, fabrication, and template-to-install sequencing.
Read Countertops →06
Custom and built-in cabinets, refacing vs replacement, cabinet painting, closet systems, and moisture-aware box construction.
Read Cabinets →07
Drywall install and repair, wall texturing, crown molding, trim, wainscoting, and interior and exterior painting for humid walls.
Read Walls →08
Garages, laundry rooms, lanai and patio conversions, mudrooms, and the finish work that turns extra square footage into living space.
Read Spaces →Editorial Standards
This is an install crew's blog, not a content farm. Every article goes through the same standard before it runs — no syndicated boilerplate, no specs we can't point to a published source for.
Waterproof ratings, wear-layer mils, PEI grades, Janka numbers, and MVER limits come from manufacturer data sheets and published standards — TCNA, NWFA, ASTM — cited by name, not paraphrased.
Every recommendation is filtered through Florida conditions: year-round humidity, slab-on-grade moisture, salt air on the coast, and the wet-room reality of a hot, rainy state.
When a project touches the Florida Building Code or High-Velocity Hurricane Zone rules, we name the code and section rather than summarize it loosely. If we're unsure, we say so.
Each article has to add something the rest of the internet doesn't — a spec table, a moisture limit, a code reference, or a field detail. If a topic already has 50 generic guides, we bring data or we don't publish.
Read enough to know your project? A Pro Work Flooring project director measures in person, tests the slab where it matters, and sends a written estimate. Statewide Florida service.
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