MRSkitten, I think the squeaky laminates have more to do with the installation than anything. those floors are one of those things that you can get away with doing a poor job on, and no-one notices right away. In my experience, when they are installed properly and with care, they don't squeak.
For me, their drawback is that they are obvious to my libran senstivities about quality. Somehow they fell un-genuine and hollow. Which they usually are, because they are up off the sub-floor by a few inches.
It's not practical for a small space, but my favourite would be waxed vinyl composite flooring, like in schools and large institutional buildings. That's what I did in the past, wax those floors, refinish them. When they are perfectly clean, and waxed and polished, the surface is spotless and easy to maintain. Aside from the heavy-duty monthly maintenance, which makes this whole idea impractical for a small space. The part I would like is how they allow a crazy amount of traction when you're bare-foot.
My pet-peeve is having to change up how I'm applying pressure because my back leg is slipping out from under me (or the table is sliding along the floor away from me) That's why I consider traction important.
I would say carpet is the next best thing, but it's essentially a rag stapled to the floor that never gets washed. I find em kinda gross, really. They clean up fairly well with extractors, and it's not that hard to do. A small one rented from the grocery store would easily do a small space. Carpets are expensive, and they do wear out. Replacement is a hassle. The ones designed for high-traffic don't look good. So, what to do?
Cork sounds interesting, how would you clean that? Is it like cork for those bulletin boards?
A coffee shop I saw had this pebble floor. It was a bunch of pea-sized pebbles in a matrix of cement or something, all smoothed up level. How would you clean that? was my first thought, it looked nasty: it was yellow at the edges (original colour) and black in the traffic lanes. Nasty. The top was bumpy, but level overall, know what I mean?
I've seen bare concrete used effectively in some places. You strip everything down to bare concrete, and apply a sealer or sealer/wax. Looks really neat, you can see the swirl patterns in the concrete, and it takes on this brown tone in one of them I saw. It almost looks like polished petrified wood, if you've ever seen that.
Carpet is bs, in my opinion. I was at this terrible place for one month. They had me working on this monster of a chiro adjustment table. What a joke that place was, anyway, they wanted me to put down area rugs under the table to prevent oil stains. They said the landlord required this to protect his carpet. These rugs, on top of carpet, were impossible to work with. Always bunching up and junk. What a mess.
What do you guys think of that? Some of you rent out space to others, what's your take on this? Do you have a right to protect your room (carpet) from stains? Is it the therapist's responsibility? Isn't it just wear-and-tear? A case in point: In a very dirty move, my friend's employer charged him $60 bucks for oil stains on the treatment room carpet. That's bad enough on it's own, but what makes this particularly dirty is that he was leaving town 2 days later (she knew) and these rooms were collectively rented by a bunch of therapists: you would take whichever room was available that day. Thoughts?
Pearl