Our high pressure floors are crafted in Lyngdal, Norway, and consist of wood-based materials, including a decor paper, two kraft papers, an HDF board, and a counterbalance paper, sourced from sustainably managed European forests. Discover the sustainable characteristics of our high pressure floors and the practices we’ve chosen to implement.

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Our high pressure floors are crafted in Lyngdal, Norway, and consist of wood-based materials, including a decor paper, two kraft papers, an HDF board, and a counterbalance paper, sourced from sustainably managed European forests. Discover the sustainable characteristics of our high pressure floors and the practices we’ve chosen to implement.
High pressure floors are not only super strong, they’re also CO2-negative (cradle to gate). Did you know that a tree absorbs approximately 25 kg of CO2 every year? Our high pressure floors are primarily wood-based, capturing approximately 4 kg of CO2 per square metre. The average living area of a house in Flanders (Belgium) is roughly 160 m2. If you compare the environmental impact of the production of ceramic tiles to that of high pressure floors, that means up to 2400 kg less CO2 is released into the atmosphere per household*.
*Sources: HPF EPD-BAC-20220057-CBA1-EN IBU 31.01.2028 and tiles S-P-00872 Environdec 2028-12-27

BerryAlloc’s high pressure floors are made in Lyngdal, Norway, providing employment to the local community and maintaining high production standards that comply with the ISO 45001, ISO 9001, and ISO 14001 standards. The excess sawdust gained during production powers the factory and the community through our own biomass energy plant.
high pressure floors