Alameda · Hardwood Flooring
Install, refinish, and protect. Engineered, solid, and wide-plank hardwood. 48-hour acclimation, baseboard-removal protocol, Ram Board after finish.
Recent East Bay Work
Recent Oakland and Piedmont Impala GAIA LVT installs — same crew we send to Alameda, same subfloor prep, same baseboard-removal protocol. 15 minutes from Oakland HQ.


Alameda hardwood specialists
Most Alameda flooring jobs we do are Impala GAIA LVT — waterproof, warm underfoot, and designed to handle island humidity without gapping. Hardwood is still the call when you have original fir or oak worth refinishing, or you want a statement species on an owner-occupied upgrade. We install both, and tell you honestly which one fits the home.
We install and refinish flooring across every Alameda neighborhood. Impala GAIA LVT in Bay Farm condo kitchens and West End Craftsman refreshes. Original Douglas fir refinishes in 1890s Gold Coast Victorians. White oak strip in East End remodels. Each project starts with the same protocol: subfloor moisture test (especially critical on the island), baseboards removed before install, 1/4" expansion gap, Ram Board down after finish. For wood installs add 48-hour acclimation in your home. The protocol is the product.

Oakland install · Impala GAIA LVT
Alameda Budget Ranges
Bay Area market ranges we see for hardwood install and refinish — includes material, subfloor prep, baseboard protocol, and Ram Board protection. Use them as a budgeting guide, not a quote.
$6–$10/sq ft
2–4 days per room
Impala GAIA luxury vinyl tile — our most-installed flooring material.
Waterproof, warm underfoot, dead-quiet on joists, dog-and-kid-proof. Handles Alameda ocean humidity well. The island kitchen-and-living-area default for a reason.
$4–$8/sq ft
3–5 days
Sand, stain, and 2-3 coats of polyurethane on your existing hardwood.
Best when the original floor is structurally sound and has enough wear layer left to sand. Preserves the character of older Alameda Victorians and Craftsmans.
$10–$22/sq ft
2–4 days per room
Solid or engineered hardwood — white oak, walnut, wide-plank, herringbone layouts.
For character-driven Alameda Victorians and owner-occupied upgrades where hardwood is the specific call.
48 hours of acclimation and proper cure windows between coats set the timeline floor. Chemistry, not labor — we do not compress these windows.
Install Process
Four phases, every hardwood job. The invisible layers are where the warranty lives.
We measure, inspect the subfloor, and walk you through species, plank width, and refinish-vs-replace. No pressure, no upsell — refinish when the floor permits it.
Hardwood sits 48 hours in your home before install. Subfloor flattened, moisture-tested, baseboards removed. No shortcuts on the invisible layers.
Lay hardwood with a proper 1/4" expansion gap. Nail, glue, or float depending on subfloor and species. Careful cut work at transitions and stair runs.
Fresh baseboards installed on top of the new flooring. Ram Board down across the full surface before any other trade walks on it. Punch-list walkthrough, warranty in writing.
Alameda Logistics
Alameda sits in the Bay with ocean humidity year-round. Hardwood expansion gaps and acclimation windows matter more on the island than they do up in the hills. Our 48-hour acclimation protocol is especially critical here — wood that comes in from a dry warehouse will swell noticeably once it sits in an Alameda home.
1890s Gold Coast Victorians and early West End Craftsmans often have original Douglas fir or white oak under layers of carpet. When there is still enough wear layer to sand, refinish beats replace every time — cheaper, faster, and preserves the character that took a century to develop.
We come across the Park Street bridge or through the Posey Tube — 15 minutes from our Oakland HQ. Material delivery coordinated around bridge/rush-hour timing. Bay Farm Island adds 5-10 minutes via the Bay Farm Island bridge.
When our flooring work finishes before other trades, we leave the Ram Board down — taped at every seam — until the last subcontractor walks off. About $120 in materials that keeps the floor pristine for handoff. Standard protocol, not an upsell.
What We Refuse
Installing flooring without removing baseboards, then covering the expansion gap with quarter round, is a cover-up. The floor buckles when the wood expands in summer because the baseboard is sitting on top of it trapping the expansion gap. If another contractor says they will "just use quarter round" to save you money, find another contractor.
48 hours minimum. We will not rush acclimation to hit a deadline. Skipping it is the #1 cause of gapping in winter and buckling in summer. The timeline is baked into our quote.
Every finished floor gets covered with Ram Board before any other trade walks on it. A scratched finished floor from a painter’s ladder or plumber’s dropped tool is a re-install. We do not cut this corner.
If your original Alameda hardwood is structurally sound and has enough wear layer left to sand, we will tell you. Refinishing runs a fraction of the cost of replacement and preserves the character of the home — especially on Gold Coast Victorians. We do not upsell replacements when refinishes would serve you better.
Why Soto Bay
Hardwood sits in your home for a full 48 hours before install. Wood is hygroscopic — it expands and contracts with humidity, especially on an island with ocean humidity. Skipping acclimation is the #1 cause of buckling or gapping down the line. We do not compress this window.
The subfloor has to be flat, clean, and properly bonded to the joists. We moisture-test both the subfloor and the material before install — if the numbers do not line up, we pause and fix it. Older Alameda Victorians often have century-old subfloors with plenty of surprises under the finish.
We remove baseboards, leave a 1/4" expansion gap behind the new flooring, and install fresh baseboards on top after. No quarter-round cover-ups. No baseboards sitting on finished flooring hiding the gap. Standard line item, not an upsell.
Finished floor gets fully covered with Ram Board, taped at every seam, before any other trade walks on it. Stays down through cabinets, counters, paint, appliance delivery. About $120 in materials that saves the thousands of dollars a scratched finished floor costs.
Reviews
10 reviews · Google Business Profile
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Licensed CSLB #1054501 · Oakland-based · Serving Alameda · Family-owned
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