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But they're different. Bamboo looks a lot like hardwood, but with the typical bamboo 'node' pattern evident. It is available as strip flooring (like standard hardwood) and as click/lock DIY stuff. It is hard ... I **think** even harder than oak. It is usually prefinished and can be refinished at least once (even in click lock). Also, it is a green floor, being from a renewable material.
Cork flooring has more pattern variety and more options for installation. It gets the pattern variations from the way it is manufactured. You can get that 'pebbly' look like you see on a cork board (but with far, far tighter 'pebbles'). But you can also get it where it looks more like hardwood and also where it looks like ... well .... cork, as in wine bottle corks. It is also available both as finished and unfinished, as tiles, as sheets, as strips, and as a click/lock DIY product (both finished and unfinished). It is very durable and very long lasting. As a point of information, Frank Lloyd Wright made a lot of use of cork floors, particularly in his public buildings and in the publics spaces in his residential buildings. Much of that original flooring is still there and still serviceable. It is also very easy on the feet.
Cork does, however, have more downside than bamboo. It needs to be refinished more often. But that's an easy job because it doesn't need to be sanded or stripped. Just recoat it with polyurethane or a similar floor finish (like acrylic). Another downside is susceptibility to water damage in some extreme cases. **If** the finish gets damaged, and **if** the cork is subjected to flooding that is not removed and dried pretty quickly, it can stain or, in extreme, extreme cases, swell. (Note, water damage is not common in cork floors, just possible.) It also tends to darken a bit with exposure to light. Most people find this a benefit, but you might not.
Lastly, cork, like bamboo, is a certified green material. The cork oaks are harvested for the bark (the cork) every few years and the harvesting does not hurt the tree at all.
Both cork and bamboo floors have a number of informational websites. Do a google search and see what pops up.
I have direct experience with both materials in commercial, high traffic, spill prone applications (restaurants and cafeterias) and would recommend either ... with the aesthetic being the determining factor
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