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SUPPLY & FIT · LONDON · SUSSEX · SURREY

WD17 · A411 / M1 J5 · 1 mi from Watford

Replace Damaged Floorboards Across Nascot Wood (WD17)

In Nascot Wood we replace individual damaged boards constantly — a burn from a dropped iron, split from a moved bookcase, black stain from a decades-old spill. The trick is sourcing a matching board (species, cut, thickness) and blending it into the surrounding floor so you can't see the join. That's a skilled job, and it's about 60% of what we do in older edwardian terrace homes.

From £320 · 1–3 boards from £320 including sand and finish blend. Larger swaps quoted after survey.

Typical turnaround: 1 day for 1–3 boards; 2–3 days for larger areas including sand & refinish blend.

Board Replacement in Nascot Wood, WD17 — edwardian terrace home

What you're seeing in Nascot Wood

Common signs we diagnose in WD17 board replacement calls:

  • New extension where new boards need to blend into existing floor
  • Woodworm holes concentrated in specific boards
  • Board that has been previously repaired badly and is now visible
  • Water damage on a small number of boards from a localised leak
  • Historic stain that won't sand out (pet urine, ink, chemical)

What's actually happening

The likely root causes in Nascot Wood's edwardian terrace homes and along A411 / M1 J5:

  1. 1

    Long-term pet urine staining that penetrated the wood

  2. 2

    Poor previous repair (mismatched board, wrong species, wrong direction)

  3. 3

    Localised accident — dropped item, appliance failure, moved furniture

  4. 4

    Radiator leak damaging specific boards below the valve

  5. 5

    Extension boards that were laid to match existing but drifted over time

Our repair process in Nascot Wood

Step 1

Board identification & source

We identify species (visual + moisture-check density), cut, thickness and width. Then source: reclaimed stock, salvage from a hidden area of your floor (under a fitted unit), or new-matched.

Step 2

Lift the damaged board

Score along the tongue with a multi-tool to isolate the board, then lift without splitting the surrounding boards. Slower with tongue-and-groove but the neighbouring boards stay intact.

Step 3

Sub-deck check

With the board out we check the sub-deck for joist condition, fixings, moisture. Any issues get flagged and fixed before the new board goes down.

Step 4

Fit & fix new board

New board planed to thickness (if reclaimed), tongued/grooved to fit, glued and nailed or screwed exactly as the original. Boards are the same direction and grain match as much as possible.

Step 5

Sand flush & colour match

Local sand-back to blend new board with surrounding floor. Stain-match to bring the new wood to the aged tone. Finish coat over the repair area (or the whole room if we're refinishing anyway).

Materials & method

Exactly what we use on Nascot Wood board replacement jobs — no vague "trade-quality" waffle.

  • Reclaimed Victorian pine, Edwardian oak, 1930s beech stock for period matching
  • Bostik Ultraset SF wood-flooring adhesive for T&G joints
  • Lost-head cut nails (period-correct) or screws depending on original floor spec
  • Bona ColorFix and Osmo StainTint for pre-finish colour matching to aged surroundings

Timeline: 1 day for 1–3 boards; 2–3 days for larger areas including sand & refinish blend. · Price: from £320 · 1–3 boards from £320 including sand and finish blend. Larger swaps quoted after survey.

Why Nascot Wood clients pick us

  • Reclaimed Victorian pine, Edwardian oak, 1930s beech in regular stock
  • Grain-matched and stain-matched at install for near-invisible blending
  • Reclaimed Victorian pine, Edwardian oak, 1930s beech in regular stock
  • Grain-matched and stain-matched at install for near-invisible blending

Board Replacement in Nascot Wood — common questions

What about tongue-and-groove — can you lift a single board?
Yes — we score along the T&G with a multi-tool to isolate the board, then lift it whole. Slower than nail-heads-up floors but preserves the neighbouring boards. This is 80% of what we do in modern engineered floors.
Will the sanding blend work?
For solid-wood floors, yes — the new board gets sanded flush and stained to match. For engineered floors we usually don't sand the surrounding area, so the new board's finish comes from the manufacturer's pre-finish (we source finished boards matching the existing).
How do you match new boards to my old floor?
Species and cut first (visual identification and, sometimes, density testing). Then source — reclaimed stock for older floors, salvage from a hidden area of your floor for perfect match, or matched new boards for modern floors. Stain-match brings colour close on day one.
Can you match reclaimed Victorian floorboards?
Yes — we hold stock of reclaimed Victorian pine and Edwardian oak, the most-requested matches in Nascot Wood. If we don't have your exact spec, we source through reclamation yards in Watford and the wider WD17 area.
How long does the repair take in Nascot Wood?
1 board: half a day. 3 boards including local sand and finish: full day. Larger areas 2–3 days including blend. We work fast because most of our sourcing is done before we arrive.
Can you replace just a few damaged boards without redoing the whole floor in Nascot Wood?
Yes — that's most of what we do in edwardian terrace homes across WD17. Individual board replacement saves the surrounding floor and costs a fraction of a full re-lay. Two or three boards is typically a one-day job.

The straight answer for Nascot Wood

In edwardian terrace homes across Nascot Wood, we save more floors from replacement than we replace. A damaged board is a repair opportunity, not a floor write-off. Match the species, blend the colour, sand it flush — and the character stays where it belongs.

Localised board repair Nascot Wood

80% cheaper than full re-lay. Character preserved.

Nearby WD areas we cover

Not all combinations are live yet — where a nearby link 404s, the same team still covers that area.