A floor done right · Surrey & Delta · solid & engineered hardwood
A hardwood floor is the quietest thing in a house and the one you stand on most. When it's done right, you never think about it — it lies flat, the seams stay tight, and the finish takes years of feet without complaint. When it's done in a hurry, you feel every shortcut: the squeak by the doorway, the gap that opens in February, the worn grey track running to the back door.
Integrity Hardwood Floors does one trade, properly. Install, sand, refinish — solid and engineered hardwood, prepped and laid by people who treat the subfloor and the acclimatization as carefully as the final coat. The room you see at the end is the easy part. The reason it stays that way is everything that happened before the first board went down.
A floor isn't laid on the day it's installed. It's laid on the day the subfloor is made flat.
The work that doesn't show
Most of what makes a hardwood floor last sits where you'll never see it: a subfloor sanded and shimmed level, planks that sat in the room long enough to settle to its moisture, fasteners set so nothing lifts when the seasons turn. Get those right and the finish stays beautiful for twenty years. Get them wrong and no top-coat in the world will save it.
Refinishing is the same idea in reverse. A tired floor isn't replaced — it's taken back to clean wood, edges cut in by hand, and sealed again. Done well, an old oak floor reads brand new and keeps the character only age can give it. The room below carries the wood right up the stairs, because the transitions were matched to the floor instead of left as an afterthought.
Why stay small
It would be easy to grow into a crew where the person who quotes the floor never sees it again. Integrity stays small on purpose. The same hands rack the boards, run the sander and lay on the finish — so there's one team standing behind how the floor looks the day it's done and how it holds up ten winters later. Across Surrey and Delta, that continuity is the product.

