
Wood Floor Installation Service near Staples in Westport CT
Homeowners near Staples in Westport CT get wood floors installed clean, on schedule, and built to hold up for decades.
The Staples neighborhood grew up fast after World War II, and most of the homes along North Avenue, Long Lots Road, and the surrounding streets show it. Colonials, capes, and ranches from the 1940s through the 1980s, nearly all owner-occupied, nearly all with original wood floors that have been lived on hard. Finishes are worn. Subfloors have shifted. The bones are good but the floors need work.
On a colonial off Long Lots Road, we pulled out strip oak that had been refinished so many times the boards were starting to thin, then laid wide-plank white oak in its place. On Whitney Street, we replaced red oak through the main level of a 1970s home and wove the new boards into existing wood at the stair landing. Tight work. The seam is invisible.
When Staples area homeowners need a wood floor installation service in Westport CT, they call Wood Floors of Westport.
Jobs Near Staples
North Avenue, Cross Highway, Long Lots Road. The houses here are big, owner-occupied, and most of them are somewhere in a renovation cycle. Families renovating before a sale, empty nesters updating before they stay. Flooring work is constant in this part of Westport.
Full main-level installations, partial replacements after kitchen gut jobs, new floors weaved into old ones where owners did not want to touch the staircase. We have done all of it in this neighborhood. One job on Long Lots Road last spring took four days because the homeowner had dogs and two kids at home and we needed to work in sections. Messy logistically. The floor came out right.
Every job in this neighborhood tells us more about how these houses were built.

Mid-Century Colonial Floors
Most of what we see in the Staples area dates from 1940 to 1969. Red oak strip flooring, 2.25-inch boards, nailed to plywood or board subfloors. It was the standard for the era. Most of it is still there, and most of it is past its prime.
Wood Floors of Westport has replaced a lot of that original strip oak in this part of town. The work usually goes the same way: pull the old floor, check what is underneath, level what needs leveling, then go down with 4-inch or 5-inch white oak. Finishes have changed too. High-gloss poly is mostly gone in Westport. Homeowners here want matte or satin now, and white oak takes those finishes well. On Compo Road South we pulled up cupped strip oak last year, found a moisture issue in the subfloor underneath, addressed it, then installed new wide-plank white oak. The finished floor looked like it belonged there.
Mid-century construction is what we know best in Westport. We do not guess at what is underneath.

Red Oak Replacement Work
Red oak was the default in Westport for decades. Now most homeowners here are done with it. The color is too warm for the way these interiors get styled today, the grain is busy, and most of it has already been refinished as many times as it will take. The wood is not bad. It is just finished.
The work on a Cross Highway colonial last fall involved pulling red oak from the living room, dining room, and hall, then installing white oak in a wider plank. The owners had original millwork they did not want to change, so we had to match the new stain to the existing trim color. Rick came out personally before we started. He brought samples, looked at the light in the room at different times of day, and came back the next morning before signing off on the finish. That is the kind of call that matters.
Getting color and grain right before installation starts is not optional.
Subfloor Preparation Cases
Older Westport homes hold surprises. Board subfloors from the 1950s shift over time. Plumbing repairs leave patches. Previous owners put flooring over problems they did not want to deal with, and those problems sit there until someone pulls up the floor and finds them.
In the Staples area, we have walked into jobs where the subfloor was the real project. Squeaky, bouncy sections along Long Lots Road needed sistering and leveling before a single new board went down. A home near the Sherwood Island Connector had gone soft in a section from an old pipe repair. In both cases, skipping subfloor prep would likely have meant problems showing up within a few years.
When you are getting quotes for wood floor installation in Westport CT, ask each contractor how they handle a bad subfloor. If the answer is vague, that is your answer.
We scope subfloor conditions before we quote. No surprises halfway through a job.
Pre-Sale Installation Work
Buyers in Westport notice floors. It is one of the first things they register when they walk into a house. Sellers in the Staples area know this, which is why we get called before listing appointments, not after.
We have turned around pre-sale installations in this neighborhood on tight schedules. A full main-level replacement on North Avenue wrapped up four days before the photographer came. A kitchen-to-hallway job on another street finished while the homeowner was still packing.
Buyers read quality in how a floor is finished, whether seams line up at doorways, whether the stain is consistent under different light. Wood Floors of Westport has done enough pre-sale work across Fairfield County to know exactly what those buyers are looking at.
If you are within a year of listing, this conversation is worth having now.
We also serve nearby Greens Farms, Westport Village, and the Fairfield border area.

Driving Directions from Staples
Our Location: 606 Post Rd E #551, Westport, CT 06880
From Staples High School at 70 North Avenue, head south on North Avenue to Long Lots Road and turn right. Follow Long Lots Road to Post Road East (Route 1) and turn left. Continue west on Post Road East approximately 1.5 miles. The office is on your right at 606 Post Rd E. The drive takes under 5 minutes.
Need a wood floor installation service near Staples in Westport CT?
Call (203) 349-0137 for fast, reliable service.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
1. Is solid hardwood or engineered wood the better choice for homes near Staples in Westport, CT?
It depends on where the floor is going and how the house manages moisture. Solid hardwood works well in main living areas of the mid-century colonials common in this neighborhood, while engineered wood is the stronger choice for basements, mudrooms, or any space with radiant heat or humidity variability.
2. How do I know whether my subfloor needs work before a new floor goes in?
You often cannot tell from the surface. Older Westport homes built between 1940 and 1970 frequently have board subfloors that have shifted, softened, or been patched, and those conditions only show up when the existing flooring comes out.
