• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • Kitchens
  • Bathrooms
  • Blog
  • Exterior
  • Other Rooms
  • Decorate
  • The “Museum”
  • Be Safe/Renovate Safe
Retro Renovation
Retro Renovation

Retro Renovation

Remodel & decorate in Mid Century Style

  • Home
  • Kitchens
  • Bathrooms
  • Blog
  • Exterior
  • Other Rooms
  • Decorate
  • The “Museum”
  • Be Safe/Renovate Safe
Home / Kitchen

Brick tile flooring — is it original to the 1960s — and should Marie keep it?

Pam Kueber - Updated: August 7, 2020

Retro Renovation stopped publishing in 2021; these stories remain for historical information, as potential continued resources, and for archival purposes.

brick tile floorBrick tile flooring: Is it appropriate for a mid-century home? And… do we like it? Marie writes:

Hi Pam,

Need to pick your brain. We’re in the process of buying a home from 1950. It’s got a lot of original details. I’m trying to figure out if the kitchen floor is original. It’s a glazed brick tile. To me it looks 90s, and I don’t like it… but maybe it is original? My aunt an uncle live in a house built in the early 60s, and it has a similar glazed brick floor in the entry and kitchen. Was glazed brick a midcentury thing? 

Thanks!! 

Marie

Congratulations, Marie, on the new/old house, and thank you for sending this question.

Brick flooring in a 1964 kitchen, from my archives. This is one of my favorite kitchens I’ve EVER show on the blog.

My answer:

My archives indicate that glazed brick flooring — either with real clay bricks or in a vinyl/asbestos or vinyl/composite resilient floor tile — were used in the midcentury era all the way through to… well, yes, the 1990s.  The brick tile flooring in your house could well be original.

retro room decor rendering
Louisa Kostich Cowan of Armstrong Flooring showed this style of flooring in her sketches. What a fabulous find these illustrations were!

Personally, I adore the look. Brick is warm and inviting, and it’s a neutral that can be matched with ‘most any style of cabinetry.

One downside to clay brick flooring would be that it could be hard on the back, like any ceramic tile would be. On the upside, though, real clay brick flooring is virtually indestructible — and golly, why wouldn’t you want flooring that would last forever and save so much money never needing to be replaced. Note, the old vinyl flooring also lasted a long long long time, I think — this stuff was made back in a time when “planned obsolescence” was still not necessarily a manufacturer’s de facto mode of operation. That is: Folks expected quality. Folks expected stuff that would last a long, long time — and were willing to pay for it.

Should it stay — or should it go? Well, here is my regularly repeated answer: Sometimes we get shocked by an old design, an old look, that we’re not accustomed to seeing anymore. It’s not popular today. It may even be “despised” by the mainstream design world (which wants us to tear out everything old and install the new stuff that They Are Selling.) So because we are are unaccustomed to seeing the old, and because the new is so well-marketed, we decide that we, too, h*** the old.

1963 Arnstrong catalog from my collection. Faux brick looks were all the rage. Armstrong #5352 — the most popular flooring ever sold — was still selling.

However, if we hit the pause button, and take the time to learn about it, and see how it was used — and loved — historically, we may come to like, or even love, it ourselves. I suggest: Live with it a while before taking costly and irreversible steps. See: Just bought a mid-century house? My 9 tips before you start remodeling + 21 more tips from readers.

CATEGORIES:
Kitchen Kitchen Flooring

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

  • retro bathroom tile
    Tile in retro colors for your mid century bathroom -- 36 places to find them
  • armstrong 5352 reintroduced
    Armstrong Flooring reintroducing its famous #5352 pattern, now named Heritage Brick
  • 26 companies that make flooring -- cork, linoleum and vinyl -- suitable for a midcentury house
  • Armstrong flooring making linoleum
    The history of Armstrong Flooring's Pattern #5352 -- the best-selling resilient flooring pattern of the 20th Century
  • hazel dell brown
    Hazel Dell Brown of Armstrong Flooring -- the most influential residential interior designer of the 20th Century (that you probably never heard of)

Reader Interactions

Comments are closed. 

95 comments

Comments

  1. Suzanna says

    August 28, 2018 at 12:22 pm

    Sorry for getting in so late to the game. I live in a 1963 ranch home which has the original brick floors through the entry hall and family room. I LOOOOVE my brick floors! They are warm, easy to care for & look great. I soften them up with oriental rugs. FWIW, our home was a FISBO. We met the owners at the open house. One of the reasons they sold to us and not to the other 3 contenders with bids in was they wanted the original features of the house (brick floors/intercom system/walls) to remain & we were the only potential buyers willing to keep all of these. Live with the floors a while – I think you’ll come to love them.

  2. Mari says

    August 5, 2018 at 1:18 pm

    We bought a 1957 house in 1975 with the original brick flooring. Loved it!

  3. Nigel says

    July 29, 2018 at 10:15 pm

    What a truly beautiful and organic looking floor. I am amazed at the detail, and the hand-made quality. No two really look alike, and they’re slightly irregular. It would be a travesty to remove this floor!

  4. Angela says

    July 16, 2018 at 10:59 pm

    I like it and have friends with a midcentury house full of floors like this.

  5. Catherine says

    July 16, 2018 at 8:48 pm

    I think it’s gorgeous! I wish it were in my home.

  6. Marcy Jentsch says

    July 16, 2018 at 11:25 am

    I love it and would use it in a kitchen right this minute! Its so warm and old world looking, and in my opinion timeless. I agree with Pam, let the shock wear off, live with it a year or so and then decide. It is neutral and you can put anything with it.

  7. Laura Crass says

    July 16, 2018 at 8:25 am

    As a Mid-Century lover, I think it is beautiful, sturdy and easy to care for. I am not a fan of the modern “cookie cutter” houses. I would take into consideration the cost to remove the real brick as that would be a very time consuming job and physically demanding. But, at the end of the day, you need to be happy in your home. Such a shame to see a real retro floor in good shape ripped up and tossed out.

  8. Susie says

    July 16, 2018 at 2:40 am

    I love it! I put in unsealed terra-cotta and hate it! your floors look beautiful.

    May I just add, that picture is making me want to paint my toe kicks black!
    Would love to see an overall picture.

  9. Cissy says

    July 16, 2018 at 12:45 am

    Keep the flooring….you obviously purchased the house because it’s style suited you….you just need to get used to that style of decor and forget today’s “sterile hospital gray and white” look that is so prevalent.

  10. Jocelan says

    July 15, 2018 at 11:40 pm

    Ya’ll (as we say in Canada) have lost your mind. This is hideous. I know you are all about living with the “original” floors as much as possible, but lets not let bad taste be the choice. It was in bad taste when it was put in originally. Move to 12″ tiles. There’s a million colours and patterns you can make. Check out the old ads for baths and kitchens and you’ll see. I’m begging you.

    • Catherine says

      July 16, 2018 at 8:56 pm

      No, no, no, no!!! That 12-inch tiling isn’t artistic at all, it’s machine-made. The wonderful brick was hand-laid. It has character, depth and warmth no machined tile could ever hope to match. The tile was a floor for the economically-challenged who couldn’t afford a beautiful custom floor like this. How can you possibly characterize this floor as having been an example of bad taste? My heart sings Provence, the warmth of traditional family values, HOME (in it’s fundamental sense) when I see this brick floor.

      Honestly, I like it so much, I could just sit and stare at it.

    • Kathryn says

      July 29, 2018 at 10:54 pm

      Whatever do you mean? Brick isn’t in bad taste at all, it’s timeless. Like, several centuries timeless.

      Not all of us in Canada would be so unpleasant as to insult your lovely classic floor in this way. I apologize for my fellow citizen up there.

      I think Pam’s advice is very sensible-we all need time to get used to design ideas that aren’t familiar to us. I grew to love a number of things about my house, completely by accident, because I couldn’t afford to replace them when I moved in. Now I’m glad I didn’t. Sometimes having a tight budget is a blessing.

« Older Comments
Newer Comments »

Primary Sidebar


Footer

Follow Along

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • RENOVATE SAFE
  • About
  • Blog
  • The “Museum”
  • Kitchens
  • Bathrooms
  • Exterior
  • Other Rooms
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Notice
  • Disclosures
  • Contact

© 2026 Retro Renovation® • All Rights Reserved • Website by Anchored Design
Please do not use any materials without prior permission. Portrait by Keith Talley Photography