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L shaped hallway - oak floor

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Old Oak
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We were thinking of encaustic tile for the hallway, but now looking at oak floorboards like in the adjacent rooms for the L-shaped hallway.

The side going from the front door into the house is aligned with long boards as in the rooms, so that’s no problem. But as the hall turns 90° to the left, that part of the L will get a bunch of short boards going across the hall if we maintain the direction of the boards.

Will it look odd? Should boards change direction as we turn the corner? Does anyone have examples of wooden floored L shaped hallways?

Also considering whether to do some kind of border detail in a contrasting wood. Anyone seen examples of that they like?

It’s an Edwardian house. Hall is 2m wide (4.3 m long) in main section from front door and goes to 1m (2.8 m long) as it turns the corner.
 
Oooh, I'd be very cautious. I'd suggest either doing everything at 45 degrees, or, as Doug suggests, using parquet. Or, best of all, sticking with your original plan.
 
As Mike said be cautious, laying your hardwood floor in the same direction as your floor joists will eventually look bad in short time.
You end up with a pattern of tight joints for a few boards then larger gaps then tight joints. And the floor will have undulations.
 
I looked at pics of our old American house which had a similar turn from entrance hall to kitchen (although the corridor bit to the kitchen very short) and corridor & kitchen boards are 90° to direction in the hall. Presumably the joists changed direction though. I don’t know what was going on under the floor. That house’s hall had three darker wood stripes as a kind of border detail that was pretty nice.

Parquet is an interesting idea. Could treat the main bit of the hall as one section with long boards and do the side branch as parquet. The side branch leads to cloak room & utility whereas the main part has kitchen, dining, living room, and staircase coming off it, so a change in mood would be OK. Will continue side branch flooring into the tiny cloakroom.

New flooring will go over the top of the existing floorboards. Floors I’ve done so far here are secret nailed, but only through the boards at the edge. Still too soon to tell how that’ll hold up over time, but since I only have myself and my wife to please, I don’t have to worry about customer callbacks.
 
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