Laminated plywood

Laminated veneer lumber (LVL) is an engineered wood product that uses multiple layers of thin wood assembled with adhesives. It is typically used for headers, beams, rimboard, and edge-forming material. LVL offers several advantages over typical milled lumber: Made in a factory under controlled specifications, it is stronger, straighter, and more uniform. Due to its composite nature, it is much less likely than conventional lumber to warp, twist, bow, or shrink. LVL is a type of structural composite lumber, comparable to Glued laminated timber but with a higher allowable stress.

Laminated veneer lumber is similar in appearance to plywood, although in plywood the veneers switch direction while stacking and in LVL the veneers all stack in the same direction. In LVL, the direction of the wood grain is always parallel to the length of the billet. The stacking of these veneers into a complete board, called a billet, creates a single piece of LVL sharing a common direction of wood grain. LVL is typically rated by the manufacturer for elastic modulus and allowable bending stress.

Plywood  coated  with  film  imprinted  with  hexagonal  pattern. 

High wear resistance (350-600 rotations according to EN 438-2:2016)

High slip resistance  

Easy care

Choice of color

Size: 1250 x 2500 mm, 1220 x 2440 mm
Thickness: 16 mm, 18 mm
Color: dark brown