AL2 · A5183 / M25 J21a · 21 mi from central London · Open-Plan Living
Luxury Vinyl Flooring (LVT & SPC) for Open-Plan Living in Park Street
Around St Albans we fit a lot of period kitchen extensions off A5183 / M25 J21a — typically 30–55m² knocked through a rear-return kitchen into a family room. The floor is always the trickiest bit of the job: continuous run, UFH-compatible, and waterproof at the sink line. Nothing else in the room has to handle all three.

Why Park Street clients book us for open-plan living
- Continuous batch supply — no mid-project colour changes
- Glue-down default over UFH for maximum heat transfer
- Continuous batch supply — no mid-project colour changes
- Glue-down default over UFH for maximum heat transfer
Why direction matters most in Park Street open-plan spaces
In period Park Street kitchen extensions with bi-fold doors opening to a garden, boards should run away from the bi-folds into the room. This visually pulls the garden into the interior and elongates the sight-line.
The UFH build-up we spec for Park Street open-plan Luxury Vinyl Flooring (LVT & SPC)
For Park Street open-plan floors with wet UFH we glue-down directly to the screed — better heat transfer than a floated build-up, no drum resonance underfoot, and 15–20% faster room warm-up. Adds £8–£12/m² over floated but eliminates the two main UFH complaints.
Local context
Conservation village around the river Ver
Nearest station
Park Street
Wet-zone sealing on Park Street open-plan floors
For period Park Street kitchen extensions we sometimes step up to a 100% waterproof spec (SPC or WPC LVT) throughout — cheaper than engineered wood, waterproof edge-to-edge, and visually near-identical when finished with proper scotia.
Open-Plan Living in Park Street — questions
- Can engineered wood really handle the kitchen part of an open-plan floor in Park Street?
- Yes, with a silicone-sealed appliance perimeter and a moisture-tolerant finish (Bona Traffic HD, or hardwax oil with a matched finish oil). We've been fitting this build-up on Park Street open-plan kitchens for 12+ years.
- How much does an open-plan floor cost in Park Street?
- Typical Park Street open-plan kitchen-diner (35–50m²) in engineered oak: £4,800–£8,900 fitted. In herringbone parquet: £6,200–£11,000. In premium LVT: £3,200–£5,800.
- What direction should boards run on my Park Street open-plan floor?
- Along the primary window line, or from the kitchen towards the living zone. Never across the former knock-through wall. We plan direction on the survey drawings before any material is ordered.
- Should the whole open-plan floor be one continuous piece in Park Street?
- Yes — one direction, one batch, no break at former walls. This is the biggest visual difference between a professional open-plan fit and a room-by-room retrofit in Park Street.
- How does UFH work with a Luxury Vinyl Flooring (LVT & SPC) open-plan floor in Park Street?
- With the right build-up — thin, thermally-conductive underlay + max 20mm total build-up + glue-down direct to screed — UFH runs efficiently under Luxury Vinyl Flooring (LVT & SPC) in Park Street. Board manufacturer must certify UFH-compatibility.
- Can we fit around a kitchen island in Park Street?
- Yes — we scribe boards to the island base and finish with a colour-matched fillet. Rare cases where the island is fixed on adjustable feet may need a full floor-under-island install.
Speak to a Park Street open-plan floor specialist
Direct advice on direction, UFH compatibility and material choice.
Open-plan Luxury Vinyl Flooring (LVT & SPC) in Park Street (AL2) is a system fit: DPM, UFH-underlay, board, silicone. Priced separately, delivered as one floor.