El Barbudo wrote:In a dining room I had a similar problem when I laid reclaimed parquet onto an existing tiled floor because I didn't want to damage the existing screed and membrane barrier beneath the tiles.
We sloped the threshold of the door out into the adjoining hall.
Ditto with the threshold of the door from the dining room out into the kitchen.
There is a noticeable tongue of parquet at the bottom of each door when you examine it from outside the room but, to be honest, because it's a neatly finished slope of nice-looking parquet and those doors are mostly left open anyway, no-one really notices.
We had a similar thing in a previous house with tiles from the conservatory being higher then the dining room (careless builder I suspect), the threshold was a planed piece of timber slightly wider than the door with an upwards slope, probably handmade rather than bought in B&Q but if you have a timberyard supplier nearby (we have
) then its the sort of thing that they could knock up in ten minutes, or I could do it and take all day and end up with a pile of firewood.