Some teeth can't be saved with a filling. This is the room for what comes after.
An oral surgery centre is a quieter kind of dental practice. There's no rush of routine checkups — just one patient at a time, a plan drawn from 3D imaging before anything begins, and a suite set up for a single kind of work: removing what can't stay, and rebuilding what can.
Most people arrive on a referral from their own dentist — a wisdom tooth that's become a problem, an implant to replace a gap, bone that needs rebuilding before a tooth can be anchored. The first visit is always a consultation: a clear look at the options, the timeline, and what each step will feel like, before a single decision is made.
What sets the day apart is its pace. Surgery done well is unhurried — time to plan, time to explain, time for the freezing and the sedation to do their job. The goal is never just to remove a tooth. It's to leave the site ready for whatever comes next, so the restoration that follows sits right and lasts.






