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Apr 16, 2026

Built to Last: What Are the Critical Foundation Steps in Constructing Your Dream Home

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Blog by Derrick A. Tan

When tiled floors begin to sound hollow, grout lines start to crack, or tiles suddenly “pumipitik” after a few years, many people immediately blame the tiles themselves.

But in reality, most tile failures are not caused by the tile. They are caused by the installation method underneath it.


One of the most common misconceptions in the Philippines is using dry-pack mortar as the primary bonding material, then relying solely on back-buttering behind the tile for adhesion.


For decades, this method was widely practiced and often appeared “matibay” during initial installation. But as tile technology evolved — especially with the rise of modern porcelain tiles — international installation standards also evolved.


Today, many global standards, such as ANSI, TCNA, and ISO installation guidelines, emphasize that porcelain tiles require a more advanced bonding system than ordinary cement mortar alone.


Why Traditional Methods Struggle with Modern Porcelain Tiles

Modern porcelain tiles are very dense and have extremely low water absorption.

Unlike older ceramic tiles, porcelain does not readily bond to ordinary cement mortar by itself. Because the tile surface absorbs very little moisture, traditional dry pack systems may not achieve reliable long-term adhesion.


This is where many failures begin.


Dry pack still plays an important role in tile installation, but its function is primarily for:

  • leveling uneven surfaces

  • slope correction

  • thickness build-up

  • substrate preparation

It is a preparation layer — not the main adhesive system for porcelain tiles.


Back Buttering Alone Is Not Enough

Another common misunderstanding is assuming that back buttering alone can compensate for improper substrate bonding.


Back buttering is important because it helps:

  • improve adhesive coverage

  • reduce voids behind the tile

  • increase contact between the tile and adhesive

However, the substrate itself must still receive a proper layer of polymer-modified tile adhesive applied using the correct trowel method.


The adhesive is what creates the engineered bond. Not the dry pack alone.


“Flatten First, Then Tile Thin”

Modern tile installation now follows a simple but important principle:

“Flatten first, then tile thin.”


This means the process should ideally follow these steps:

  1. Correct substrate flatness using screed, bonded mortar bed, or self-leveling compound

  2. Apply proper polymer-modified tile adhesive on the substrate

  3. Back butter large-format tiles when necessary

  4. Achieve proper adhesive coverage throughout the installation

The focus is no longer simply on making the tile appear level.


The focus is on long-term system performance.


Why Tile Failures Eventually Happen

Many installations may initially look perfect but begin failing years later, especially when exposed to:

  • rain

  • thermal expansion

  • vibration

  • heavy foot traffic

  • moisture intrusion

Over time, poor bonding systems can lead to:

  • hollow sounds

  • debonding

  • popping tiles

  • cracked grout lines

  • loose outdoor tiles

  • water infiltration beneath the tile system

This is especially critical for large-format porcelain tiles, where modern standards now strongly emphasize:

  • substrate flatness

  • proper adhesive coverage

  • polymer-modified adhesives

  • back buttering for large tiles

  • movement of the accommodation joints

The Industry Must Evolve with Modern Materials

Construction materials continue to evolve.


Tiles today are larger, denser, and more technically advanced than ever before. Because of this, installation methods must evolve as well.


The old mindset of “Tapal lang para pumantay.” is gradually being replaced by a systems-based approach focused on durability, movement, adhesion, and long-term performance.


Because even the best tiles installed using poor methods will still fail.

But a properly designed tile system — with the right substrate preparation, adhesive selection, and installation practice — can perform reliably for decades.


The future of tiling is no longer thicker mortar.


The future is smarter systems.

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