RM3 · A12 J28 / M25 · 17 mi from central London · Living Room Flooring
Luxury Vinyl Flooring (LVT & SPC) for Living Rooms in Harold Wood
In Harold Wood (RM3) we quote a lot of open-plan lounges — Victorian rear-reception knock-throughs, 1930s bay-fronted front rooms, new-build family rooms. Each needs a different board width and direction of run. Front rooms with bays take narrower boards; deep rear reception rooms take 200mm+.

Why Harold Wood clients book us for living room flooring
- Direction of run planned to the primary light source on every Harold Wood lounge
- Furniture moves included on standard Harold Wood living-room installs
- Direction of run planned to the primary light source on every Harold Wood lounge
- Furniture moves included on standard Harold Wood living-room installs
The Luxury Vinyl Flooring (LVT & SPC) spec that suits Harold Wood lounges
In new build Harold Wood homes we'll adjust: bay-fronted rooms take 160–180mm, open-plan rear reception rooms take 200–220mm. Board length matters too — a lounge under 4m benefits from 1.8m+ board length so the eye reads plank, not tile.
Getting board direction right in Harold Wood lounges
Open-plan Harold Wood lounges get one continuous direction across the whole footprint — no changing angles between old and new sections. This is a hard rule on our jobs; breaking it always looks retrofitted.
Local context
Major NHS hospital regeneration site (Kings Park)
Nearest station
Harold Wood (Elizabeth Line)
Sofa, rugs and dents — the Harold Wood lounge maintenance brief
The two things that damage Harold Wood lounge floors are metal castors and unshod chair feet. Every Harold Wood lounge we finish gets felt-pad guidance in the handover pack, and we price protection on request.
Living Room Flooring in Harold Wood — questions
- Should the lounge and hallway floors match in Harold Wood?
- In most new build Harold Wood homes, yes — visual continuity between the entrance and the main reception room adds perceived value. Where lounge and hall are on different levels or divided by full-height doors, they can differ.
- Can I have herringbone in a Harold Wood lounge?
- Yes — herringbone parquet in a Harold Wood reception room is one of the most-requested specs. Needs the room to be at least 3m×3m for the pattern to read properly; anything smaller looks cramped.
- Can I restore an existing floor in my Harold Wood living room?
- If the boards are 18mm+ and the joists are sound, almost always. On Harold Wood Victorian and Edwardian reception rooms we restore rather than replace on 40%+ of projects.
- Which board width suits a Harold Wood living room?
- 180–220mm for open-plan or square reception rooms in Harold Wood; 160–180mm for bay-fronted or narrower rooms. Wider is not always better — proportionate to room width is what matters.
- What finish suits a family living room in Harold Wood?
- Matte hardwax oil is the family-lounge default in Harold Wood — hides scuffs, re-coats without a full sand, and warms visually. Reserve lacquer for lower-traffic or period restoration jobs.
- Do you move furniture on a Harold Wood living room fit?
- Yes — light furniture moves included on the day. Full-house moves and storage are quoted separately; typically £180–£380 for a fully-furnished Harold Wood lounge.
Speak to a Harold Wood living room floor specialist
Direct advice on board width, colour and direction of run.
Living room floors in Harold Wood (RM3) are the room the guest sees first — spec, direction and finish should all reflect that.