Wood Floor Fitting in Harpenden
We cover Harpenden and all surrounding areas
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For all your Wood Floor Fitting Contact Us Today
Wood flooring is practical, beautiful and easy to install and maintain. Hard wood flooring offers a wide variety of design options. The clean look and feel of wood gives a sense of warmth and comfort to your home and can increase the value of your property.
Towns In Hertfordshire we Fit Wood Flooring
Baldock – Borehamwood - Harpenden – Hatfield – Hertford – Hitchin
Hoddesdon – Hemel Hempstead - Letchworth - Potters Bar – St Albans
Royston – Stevenage - Ware - Watford - Welwyn Garden City
If your area is not covered please click here for full list
We will fit your flooring whether you choose solid, high quality or engineered wood. It will be expertly fitted to the highest standard. I can fit floors anywhere, from a small room in a house to large commercial premises I specialise in all aspects including stairs and halls. I cover Hertfordshire, Bedfordshire, and Buckinghamshire as well as London
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Solid wood floor is a solid piece of timber, cut from a tree milled into a plank and kiln dried; it should be installed in a moisture-controlled environment and is therefore not recommended for areas such as cellars, basements, conservatories or with under-floor
heating systems.
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Engineered wood floors have a bit more work involved as they consist of a multi-ply, cross-laid backing with a veneer top layer of a selected species and design. Therefore, due to its construction, engineered flooring is more dimensionally stable and can be installed in areas where solid wood is not compatible.The cost compared to solid wood flooring is cheaper because the wood finish is only on the top layer. For example, if you want an oak finish, then only the top layer is oak and the lower layers will be made of a cheaper wood such as pine.
I hope my brief definitions of the various wood floors you can choose has helped you to find the solution to your questions. It also demonstrates why you need an expert with 35 year experience to help you make that final decision. Contact me today for free advice and a visit to your home to provide a solution and a free quote.
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When it comes to choosing the décor for home or office, one of the most important elements is flooring. If you want to find a floor material that offers that extra bit of luxury combined with a practical solution, you must go with wood flooring. When it comes to finding the most suitable wood flooring, you'll want to speak to the experts. I can offer a range of services. For a free quote and home visit contact me today.
For a free quote, please contact me today on 07778 406793 or 01438 722047
Or you can email me, or complete the onlineform.
Harpenden
Harpenden is in Hertfordshire. Harpenden railway station is on rail link to central London served by First Capital Connect Trains run north to Luton and on to Bedford.) and London Gatwick Airport. The River Lea flows through the area and the M1 runs nearby.
History
There are Roman remains in and around Harpenden. Harpenden village grew out of Westminster Abbey's gradual clearing of woodland for farming and settlement within its Wheathampstead manor, granted by Edward the Confessor in 1060 The church of St Nicholas is the oldest church in the town, originally built as a Chapel of ease in 1217.
On the southern edge of the town lies Nomansland Common (sometimes simply called "No Man's Land") upon which part of the Second Battle of St Albans was fought during the Wars of the Roses. Nomansland Common also saw the first annually contested steeplechase in England, in 1830 when it was organised by Thomas Coleman, and the last fight of nineteenth century bare-knuckle fighter, Simon Byrne. It was also the haunt of the highwaywoman known as Lady Katherine Ferrers, better known as the "Wicked Lady".
A widespread industry for Harpenden was straw-plaiting, a trade mainly carried out by women in the nineteenth century. A good straw plaiter could make as much as a field labourer. The straw plaits were taken to the specialist markets in St Albans or Luton and bought by dealers to be converted into straw items such as boaters and other hats or bonnets.
The arrival of the railway system from 1860 and the sale of farms for residential development after 1880 radically changed Harpenden's surroundings. It grew from a basically agricultural village into a town.
Harpenden's most prestigious contribution to history is Rothamsted Manor and Rothamsted Research (formerly Rothamsted Experimental Station and later the Institute of Arable Crops Research), a leading centre for agricultural research. In front of its main building, which faces the common, is a stone, erected in 1893, commemorating 50 years of experiments by Sir John Bennet Lawes and Joseph Henry Gilbert.
Above information sourced from various We history sites with special thanks to Wikipedia
Towns In Hertfordshire
Baldock – Borehamwood - Harpenden – Hatfield – Hertford – Hitchin
Hoddesdon – Hemel Hempstead - Letchworth - Potters Bar – St Albans
Royston – Stevenage - Ware - Watford - Welwyn Garden City
Villages In Hertfordshire
Abbots Langley - Adeyfield - Albury End – Albury - Aldbury - Aldenham - Allen's Green – Amwell - Ansells End – Anstey –Ardeley – Ashwell - Aspenden - Aston End – Aston - Astrope - Ayot Green - Ayot St Lawrence - Ayot St Peter - Babbs Green - Bakers End - Ballingdon Bottom – Barkway -Barley - Barleycroft End – Batchworth – Batford – Bayford – Beane –Bedmond - Bell Bar - Belsize – Benington - Bennetts End - Berkhamsted - Bishop's Stortford -Bourne End – Bovingdon - Bower Heath – Boxmoor - Bozen Green - Bragbury End – Bramfield – Braughing - Braughing Friars - Brent Pelham – Brickendon - Bricket Wood - Brookmans Park –Broxbourne – Buntingford – Bushey –Buckland - Bygrave
Caldecote - Chapmore End – Charlton – Chaulden - Cherry Green – Chipperfield - Chiswell Green – Clothall - Codicote -Colney Heath - Colney Street - Croxley Green – Cuffley - Dane End – Datchworth – Digswell – Eastbury –Elstree -.Essendon – Felden - Fields End – Flamstead – Flaunden – Frithsden - Furneux Pelham
Garston – Gilston - Goffs Oak – Gosmore – Graveley - Great Amwell - Great Gaddesden - Great Hormead - Great Munden - Great Wymondley – Heronsgate - Hertford Heath – Hertingfordbury – Hexton - High Wych – Highfield – Hinxworth – Holwell -How Wood - Hunsdon - Hunton Bridge –Ickleford - Jersey Farm
Kelshall – Kimpton - King's Walden - Kings Langley - Kinsbourne Green – Knebworth – Langley – Lemsford - Letchmore Heath - Leverstock Green – Lilley - Little Berkhamsted - Little Gaddesden - Little Hadham - Little Hormead - Little Wymondley - London Colney - Long Marston – Loudwater
Maple Cross – Markyate – Meesden - Moor Park - Much Hadham - Napsbury - Napsbury Park - Nash Mills – Nettleden -Newgate Street – Newnham - North Mymms - Northaw - Norton – Nuthampstead – Oaklands - .Offley - Old Hall Green
Old Hatfield - Old Knebworth
Park Street - Piccotts End – Pirton - Potten End – Preston – Puckeridge – Puttenham –Radlett – Radwell – Redbourn –Reed– Rickmansworth –Ridge – Ringshall - Rush Green – Rushden – Sacombe - Sacombe Green - St Ippolyts - St Paul's Walden – Sawbridgeworth - South Oxhey – Spellbrook - Sandon – Sandridge – Sarratt – Shenley - South Mimms - St Stephens – Standon - Stanstead Abbotts - Stanstead St Margarets – Stapleford - Stocking Pelham
Tewin - Therfield – Thorley – Thundridge – Tonwell –Walkern – Walsworth- Waltham Cross – Wareside - Warner's End – Waterford – Watford - Watton-at-Stone - Welham Green -Well End - Wellpond Green – Welwyn – Westmill – Weston - Westwick Row –Wheathampstead – Whitwell – Widford – Wigginton - Willian – Wilstone – Woollensbrook - Woolmer Green – Wormley -Wyddial
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