• 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 / Kitchen Flooring

Parquet flooring for a ranch house? Yes — an “authentic” top-of-the-line choice

pam kueber - Updated: May 20, 2020

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

Lynn recently bought a 1960 ranch house and asked me whether I thought her wood parquet floors (small photo to the right) were original. Almost without a doubt I answer: Yes. The lead photo above is my dining room floor. This floor is original to my 1951 colonial-modern ranch. The parquets are each 12″ wide. They are made from fullsize pieces of wood flooring — this is not a thin veneer. In fact, somewhere in my travels I have heard that parquet flooring like mine was more expensive to purchase and install than the more common long runs of oak tongue-in-groove flooring. Wood parquet was more complicated, more fussy, and therefore, more expensive. The adjacent, step-down living room, by the way, got wall-to-wall carpet.

We have explored recently what color stain is most appropriate for your midcentury hardwood floors — the mass, we believe, were done in “natural”, like mine. But we’ve also seen darker stains. 

CATEGORIES:
Kitchen Flooring

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

  • 26 companies that make flooring -- cork, linoleum and vinyl -- suitable for a midcentury house
  • vintage kitchen by wren and willow
    Wren & Willow's little bit of perfection 1940s house remodel: Let's start with the kitchen
  • Armstrong flooring making linoleum
    The history of Armstrong Flooring's Pattern #5352 -- the best-selling resilient flooring pattern of the 20th Century
  • armstrong 5352 reintroduced
    Armstrong Flooring reintroducing its famous #5352 pattern, now named Heritage Brick
  • 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. 

51 comments

Comments

  1. Sarah says

    July 31, 2014 at 3:09 pm

    We have the same floors, pictured in the lead photo, in our kitchen. I love how the braided rug looks with it. Do you know where this rug can be purchased? Thank you!

    • pam kueber says

      July 31, 2014 at 3:33 pm

      That’s my house — it’s a Capel rug. See this story — https://retrorenovation.com/2009/03/15/braided-rugs-suit-50s-and-60s-style-perfectly-i-like-capel/

      We also have written about braided rugs from Thordyke Mills — https://retrorenovation.com/2010/12/08/braided-rugs-from-thorndyke-mills/

      • Sarah says

        August 6, 2014 at 9:09 am

        Beautiful home! Thank you for the information about the rug.

  2. Jennifer Logan says

    July 28, 2014 at 12:33 pm

    Yes, you do have to have it custom made.

    We just had a burst pipe flood and ruined our 1957 original oak parquet that was in the entire house except the baths and kitchen. Our three bedrooms were spared. Sad, sad, sad. I asked a local master hardwood expert / floor restorer about it and he said that the only way to get these 3/4 inch red oak parquet tiles is to have them custom made or salvage them. (They only make a lower quality 5/16 thin, premade parquet these days). They actually have to custom make them from pre-cut strip flooring boards because no one manufactures them anymore. Bummer. And it is super duper expensive (possibly 3 to 4 times the cost of a strip floor)
    As for us, we are looking for a new engineered floor (per his recommendation) because we live in hot, humid, wet Florida and hardwood buckles even with the humidity sometimes here. We are trying to find something (strip flooring, most likely) that will look good with the red oak parquet in the bedrooms that was spared the water damage. We have to replace the hallway wood that opens to the bedrooms.

    What have others done to keep the floors looking period appropriate when they couldn’t get lovely old parquet?

    • pam kueber says

      July 28, 2014 at 1:03 pm

      See all our flooring research — it’s in Kitchens/Flooring.

      For main living areas — how about cork? Or if you can find someone to do it — in Florida, the go-to most desirable floor would have been terrazzo. Could be even more spendy today than the real-deal parquet.

    • pam kueber says

      July 28, 2014 at 1:08 pm

      Is $10/s.f. too much? Found this in 2 minutes of online searching — http://www.czarfloors.com/item_details.asp?sku=M29

      • Jennifer Logan says

        July 28, 2014 at 2:35 pm

        Thanks for the investigating and the terrazzo idea. $10/sq ft is pretty expensive because we have about 1000 square feet to cover and it is unfinished and doesn’t include a new subfloor or installation costs. I’ll look into the terrazzo, which would be cool underfoot in the summer heat.

        • pam kueber says

          July 28, 2014 at 2:55 pm

          You could also do VCT — if you like the casual look throughout the entire house… see our stories on Azrock VCT tile — TexTile and Azrock Cortina Autumn Haze — they have the old skool “jaspe” look. Even less expensive, probly: Armstrong Imperial Excelon VCT. Key to installing these floors successfullly is, I believe, getting the subfloor absolutely positively smooth; consult a pro.

  3. genjen says

    December 22, 2013 at 10:59 pm

    I have original 9×9 red oak parquet throughout my entire 1950s California ranch house. I am DESPERATE to find a good quality of replacement pieces. Water damaged ruined a sizable section of one room’s flooring and I’m heartsick about it. None of the modern parquet tiles on the market will work. Any guidance is very much appreciated.

    • pam kueber says

      December 23, 2013 at 9:24 am

      I don’t know… you may have to have this custom made?

  4. Julie Selden says

    June 6, 2013 at 3:18 pm

    I live in a 1968 home with parquet flooring. It is in pretty good shape. But I am always wondering how to take care of it from weekly and if I am suppose to be finishing it. It has never been refinished and looks good.

  5. Bridgette French says

    June 9, 2012 at 8:00 am

    We have an entire kitchen .dining and well lot’s of Parquet flooring concentrated in one area. We certainly think that the flooring is in keeping with our glorious new home BUT they are in ruff ruff shape.

    What do all you hipsters out there think of refinishing them and darkening them from their original goldish, oakyish state? Darkish?

    • pam kueber says

      June 9, 2012 at 9:45 am

      These can be refinished just like “regular” wood floors. Me: I’m for natural finishes. Dark finishes are not only *trendy*, they show every speck of dirt. See this post: https://retrorenovation.com/2009/09/13/stain-color-for-195s-1960s-wood-floors/

  6. Shelly says

    April 27, 2012 at 9:44 pm

    We recently purchased a home with beautiful parquet floors in the dining room and living room. It was a surprise when we tore out the carpet. The kitchen has faux hardwood flooring that must go, but I am not sure what to replace it with. The parquet floor in the adjoining dining room is so busy that anything in the kitchen with much pattern to it will be too much. Any suggestions?

    • pam kueber says

      April 27, 2012 at 11:45 pm

      I have Azrock Cortina Autumn Haze right up next to the parquet, love it. See all my flooring posts… in Kitchens/Flooring…

  7. Jessica says

    April 7, 2012 at 1:30 am

    My ’57 Fickett has 4″ parquet throughout the house, I have always questioned whether this was the correct flooring for the house. Have you seen any vintage photos of mid-century houses with parquet when the house was new? I haven’t been able to locate any and therefore question whether the parquet is original. I would love to see any vintage pics if anyone has them.

  8. Clare says

    March 17, 2012 at 5:06 pm

    Here’s my funny parquet story:

    We have original 1957 parquet all the way through the main floor of our mid mod ranch. The kind where each square is made up of 1-inch-wide strips. It’s in rough shape with some water damage in spots and many loose pieces…

    …One time I was on the phone in the kitchen and my then five-year-old daughter came into the kitchen holding a few of the floor pieces. I told her, no, no, you can’t pull up the floor, but then stupidly kept on talking on the phone. When I was finished and went into the living room, I found large swaths of the floor had been pulled up. My living room looked like one giant almost finished puzzle.

    Sigh. It didn’t take me long to put most of the pieces back, but of course, the last few didn’t fit and needed to be sanded down.

    You gotta love kids!

  9. Rebecca Gonzalez says

    March 14, 2012 at 12:32 am

    We had parquet just like this in our house. 1/2 inch thick. Then a dishwasher was installed incorrectly, ruining the floor all over the house. Boo. It had to be removed and we were heart broken. Whenever we touch anything water related, we check and double check now.

« Older 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