Best of Everything (BOE) Products & Sustainability Part 6

TCAA Tile Talk Monthly

November 2024

TCAA Website

Best of Everything: The Level Best

Article sponsored by Best of Everything (BOE)

Best of Everything (BOE) once again listened to our Loyal Contractors and Distributors… with the introduction of The Level Best leveling system!

While our patented Vortex “threaded post” leveling system and Lippage Eliminator II “wedge & clip” leveling system both continue to be very effective and highly popular, we were asked to develop a new leveling system with “window caps” and “enhanced posts” as tiles, stones, and pavers continue to get larger, thicker, and heavier.

What makes The Level Best… the best?

  1. Strength for Larger, Heavier Tiles
    The threaded posts are designed to be especially strong for heavier floor and wall tiles, from 1/4” to 3/4” thick. You can easily snap and remove the posts once the mortar is cured, with either a mallet or a good kick.

  2. See-Through “Window Caps”
    The window caps allow you to make certain your adjacent tiles are perfectly level. This makes your work both more precise and efficient. The caps are reusable on installation after installation.

  3. Compatible with Other Systems
    The Level Best is compatible with many “other” similar systems in the industry, meaning if you have “old” caps or posts, you will have no issue using them up.

  4. Reusable Washer
    Recommended for all installations, the reusable washers prevent scratching and movement of tile and stone during installation.

  5. Leveling Systems Calculator
    To simplify your estimated number of units needed per job, we developed a proprietary “Leveling Systems Calculator” (works for The Level Best, Vortex, and Lippage Eliminator II). By using this link to our website, or scanning the QR code below with your phone, you simply enter in the width and length of your tile or stone, along with the square footage of the job, and you will instantaneously receive the estimated number of units needed. There are even visual configuration diagrams showing the ideal layout of The Level Best pieces on the all the various tile sizes.

  1. Sizing and Packaging Options

All these benefits… backed by Best of Everything’s 100% Customer Satisfaction Guarantee!

The ORIGINAL Schluter®-DlTRA uncoupling membrane for tiled floors is now available in a peel and stick option!

Click here to learn more!

Reducing our carbon footprint with tile: Part 6 – The role of qualified labor in reducing our carbon footprint with tile

by Scott Conwell, FAIA, FCSI, LEED AP, Director of Industry Development International Masonry Institute

In this final installment of our 6-part series on reducing our carbon footprint with tile, we’ll briefly review the high points covered so far and conclude with a discussion of perhaps the most important contributor to long-lasting sustainable tile installations: qualified labor.

Part 1 of the series (Click Here) put into perspective the construction industry’s current focus on sustainability and provided an overview of tile’s inherent sustainable attributes. Part 2 (Click Here) was an introduction to transparency in reporting building material ingredients, and parts 3 (Click Here) & 4 (Click Here) took a deep dive into quantifying, screening, and disclosing material ingredients and their environmental impact, and optimizing material selection based on the transparency of manufacturers’ reporting this information in standardized forms such as Health Product Declarations (HPDs). Part 5 (Click Here) discussed how Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs) provide a standardized platform for material manufacturers to report Global Warming Potential (GWP) of their products based on product category-consistent Life Cycle Analyses (LCAs), offering designers a way to compare the relative environmental impacts of materials they are considering.

Taking all the above into account, it can be concluded that durable materials like tile and stone contribute to a building’s sustainable performance… but only if these materials are installed properly. This brings us to the final point of the series: the role of qualified labor in reducing our carbon footprint with tile.

To communicate the importance of qualified labor and the role it plays in optimizing the permanence of the tile installation, the tile industry has developed well-established benchmarks that credential and identify best-practice tile contractors and installers.

For example, the International Masonry Industry Training and Education Foundation (IMTEF) delivers comprehensive tile training for pre-apprentice, apprentice, and journeyworker tile setters and finishers on behalf of the International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers (IUBAC). Installers who hold an Advanced Certifications for Tile Installers (ACT) certification have demonstrated outstanding technical efficiency. And tile contractors who carry TCAA’s Trowel of Excellence certification have proven to possess the technical and business skills and experience for even the most complex installations. Architects and specifiers are encouraged to consider these programs and require minimum levels of competence in their projects’ Tiling specifications to ensure a long-lasting and sustainable installation.

Conclusion

When tile was first manufactured and laid in our buildings centuries ago, there were no sustainability standards or rating systems because durable materials were used everywhere, to the credit of the builder. But now, with the proliferation of cheaper synthetic materials and a misplaced focus on reducing initial cost, the construction industry has begun to standardize ways we measure health and human impacts of building materials, and to discourage the use of materials that may be harmful.

Fortunately, building material suppliers are now paying more attention to their manufacturing and other practices, including transparency in reporting. Since tile has always been made of natural ingredients and of durable performance, the GWP data reported in tile’s material disclosures, LCAs, EPDs, all point to the fact that, when installed by qualified labor, tile will last the lifetime of the project.

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