The amount of grouting material required will depend on the size of the tiles. If the tiles are small, such as mosaic tiles, there will be a lot more required (because there is a much greater number and therefore area of joints) than for large format tiles.
The type of grout being used will also affect the amount.
One grout manufacturer's calculator is given as a Related link to this question.
Approximately 900 square feet of tile, less the area taken up by grout.
160 of them.
154 floor tiles. A tile measuring 12 inches on each side is one square foot, hence 154 square feet.
one square foot is 144 sq inches, your tile is 4 square inches, therefore 144/4= 36 pieces per square foot, so 36x120=4,320 tiles however, it will be less then that depending upon the size of your grout line and if the tile is truly 2x2. (some tile says its 4x4 for example, but if you measure it will be 3 and 5/8 or something so its important to physically measure the tile One easy way would be to buy the small tiles on the mesh backing, like mosaic, they come in 1 sq ft pieces so you'd need 120. They are easy to install and your grout lines will be very consistant.
Total, there are 48 inches all the way around a 1 foot square tile.
Approximately 900 square feet of tile, less the area taken up by grout.
Tile is an Italian ceramic is about $5.29 a square foot. Tile, grout, tax is around $3000.00, from local store in NJ.
The answer depends on the units used for the measurements given in the question.
At Sears it costs $0.59 per square foot to hire a professional to come in and clean tile and grout. There is a minimum charge of $89.00 for a professional to come to your house. However with $10.00 for cleaner and a little elbow grease, you may be able to do it yourself.
grout removal and replacement is a hard and long project unless you already have the tools and knowledge, If you hire a tile contractor you are likely to spend anywhere from 2.50 to 3.50 a sq foot depending on the age of the grout and the thickness and width of the grout..........
No, the grout allows for tile expansion and contractions, without it your tile could crack but there are some tile that can be installed with minimal (1/16inch) grout lines.
At Home Depot, the least expensive ceramic tile costs $0.78 per square foot. The more expensive tiles are over $3.00 per square foot.
form_title= Tile Grout form_header= Give your home a face lift with new tile grout! Do you want to install new grout?*= () Yes () No () Not Sure Do you want to clean out old grout?*= () Yes () No () Not Sure What color do you want the grout?*= _ [50] How old is the grout in your home? *= _ [50]
With grout
You price a ceramic tile job by the square foot. This all depends on how much you have to install.
It depends on the type of tile you have. If the tile is unglazed and porous (as mostly all travertine is) then you will need to seal the tile before you grout it so that the grout does not soak into the tile and cause it to become dull. Follow the manufacturers recommendation for the tile that you have.
160 of them.