Commercial Solution
Carpet Tile & Broadloom
Modular carpet tile for corridors, offices, and worship spaces. Broadloom for sanctuaries, conference rooms, and large open-plan environments. Both installed substrate to surface.
When Carpet Is the Right System
Acoustic Control, Comfort, and Replaceability
Not every commercial space needs hard surface flooring. Worship sanctuaries need sound absorption. Hotel corridors near guest rooms need impact noise reduction. Conference rooms need acoustic clarity. Office environments need comfort underfoot during 8-hour days. These are environments where carpet — tile or broadloom — outperforms LVT on the metrics that matter most.
Commercial carpet tile shares the same operational philosophy as loose lay LVT: modular, replaceable, and maintainable without shutting down the facility. When a tile is stained, damaged, or worn in a traffic lane, it lifts out and a fresh tile drops in. No seam-matching, no re-stretching, no full-room replacement.
Broadloom remains the right choice for large open areas — sanctuaries, banquet halls, and conference rooms — where seamless visual coverage and maximum acoustic absorption justify wall-to-wall installation. We install both systems and recommend based on the space, not the margin.
Why Commercial Carpet Systems
Acoustic performance, modular maintenance, and substrate-integrated installation — the operational advantages that make carpet the right system for specific commercial environments.
Acoustic Performance
Carpet tile and broadloom absorb impact noise and reduce reverberation — measurably improving the audio environment in worship sanctuaries, hotel corridors, and conference rooms where sound control matters.
Modular Replacement
Carpet tile lifts out and replaces individually. When a tile is stained, burned, or worn in a traffic lane, one tile swaps — not the entire room. No seam-matching, no re-stretching, no full-room replacement.
Solution-Dyed Nylon Fiber
The Pentz lines we specify use solution-dyed nylon — color engineered into the fiber during manufacturing. Permanently resistant to bleach, sunlight fading, and aggressive cleaning chemicals used in commercial environments.
Design Flexibility
Carpet tile allows pattern mixing, directional changes, and zone differentiation within the same space. Broadloom delivers seamless, wall-to-wall coverage for large open areas where visual continuity is the priority.
Substrate Integration
We prepare the concrete substrate before carpet goes down — grinding, moisture testing, and mitigation when needed. The same process we apply to LVT installations. Carpet over a bad slab fails just as fast.
Phased Installation
Carpet tile installs zone by zone in occupied facilities. No adhesive cure time for modular systems means spaces return to service the same day. Broadloom requires short cure windows but can still be phased across sections.
System Components
Carpet Systems We Install
Pentz Uplink Tile
24" × 24" modular tile • 30+ oz face weight • Solution-dyed nylon
Primary specification for commercial corridors, offices, and hospitality common areas. High-traffic durability with individual tile replaceability.
Pentz Chivalry Tile
24" × 24" modular tile • Nexus backing • 16 colorways
Worship spaces, classroom wings, nurseries, and conference rooms. Acoustic absorption with refined pattern options.
Broadloom Carpet
12' roll goods • Commercial-grade face weight • Direct glue or stretch installation
Large sanctuaries, banquet halls, conference rooms, and open-plan offices where seamless coverage and maximum acoustic absorption are required.
Product specification is determined during the site walk based on traffic patterns, acoustic requirements, maintenance expectations, and budget. We recommend based on the environment — not the product catalog.
Carpet Tile vs. Broadloom — When to Use Each
Carpet Tile
- • Hotel corridors and common areas
- • Commercial offices and workspaces
- • Worship fellowship halls and classrooms
- • Any space requiring individual tile replacement
- • Phased installation in occupied buildings
- • Zones with high stain or damage risk
Broadloom
- • Worship sanctuaries and chapels
- • Banquet halls and conference rooms
- • Large open-plan office environments
- • Spaces where seamless visual coverage matters
- • Maximum acoustic absorption applications
- • Budget-driven large-area installations
Frequently Asked Questions — Commercial Carpet Systems
What is the difference between carpet tile and broadloom for commercial spaces?
Carpet tile is modular — individual tiles can be replaced when stained or damaged without affecting the surrounding floor. Broadloom is wall-to-wall carpet from a roll, providing seamless coverage for large open spaces. Carpet tile is better for high-traffic zones where maintenance matters. Broadloom is better for sanctuaries, conference rooms, and spaces where acoustic performance and visual continuity are the priority.
Do you prepare the subfloor before installing commercial carpet?
Yes. Every carpet installation begins with substrate assessment — concrete grinding if needed, ASTM-standard moisture testing, and vapor mitigation when moisture levels exceed safe thresholds. Carpet over a compromised slab leads to mold, adhesive failure, and premature wear. We apply the same preparation standards to carpet that we apply to LVT.
Can carpet tile be installed in an occupied commercial facility?
Yes. Carpet tile is ideal for phased installation in occupied buildings. Tiles install zone by zone — one section of a corridor or office can be completed while the rest remains in service. There is no adhesive cure time for pressure-sensitive installations, so spaces return to use the same day.
Where do you install commercial carpet tile and broadloom?
We install commercial carpet systems across Tennessee and Northern Alabama — Nashville, Franklin, Brentwood, Murfreesboro, Hendersonville, Clarksville, Knoxville, Chattanooga, and Huntsville. Hotels, worship facilities, offices, multifamily common areas, and institutional buildings.
Carpet Tile or Broadloom — Start With the Space
Schedule a site walk. We'll assess your facility's acoustic requirements, traffic patterns, and substrate conditions — then recommend the right carpet system for each zone.
Schedule Site Walk