I'm no contractor, but I've done some floors before and I've never seen this lol
Is there a chance that this tile was just laid over hexagonal tile, instead of through the normal process of pulling up the old tile first?
Home Improvement
I'm no contractor, but I've done some floors before and I've never seen this lol
Is there a chance that this tile was just laid over hexagonal tile, instead of through the normal process of pulling up the old tile first?
Perhaps you can pull up a transition piece where this tile ends (a threshold or wooden transition maybe). That might show you/confirm the other layer that's maybe below it.
For what it's worth, it looks more like someone tiled on top of tile for some reason? Like under the big square is the hexagonal, and the big tiles are cracking along the low spots of the tiles below.
That seems like the most plausible reason.
Tiling over old tiles isn't that uncommon, and here I suspect they used very little glue (or poor quality glue) so as to not increase the thickness of the floor too much (to avoid issues with thresholds etc.). Thin and/or low quality tiles could be another explanation, as to why they crack lack this..
Either way, I can't think of a way to fix this without ripping up the old tiles and laying new ones.
Someone laid new tiles on top of the old ones. It's actually quite impressive how neatly it has cracked along the shape of the underlaying tiles. There's no quick fix for this though. You need to do what the previous person should've done which is to tear it all out and start from scratch.
That's rough. Those tiles are broken because they were installed improperly. The proper fix is to redo.
However, that's expensive and or time consuming. A rug or bath mats would cover it in a pinch. I recommend not doing a tile surface refinish (sold as kits like Rust-Oleum) because the cracks will just show through again shortly, and you'll lose any non-slip properties those floor tiles have.
Potentially cleaning with diluted white vinegar will make it less visible, but it won't fix the underlying issues.