CM2 · A138 / A12 · 30 mi from central London · Period Homes
Springfield Period Home Flooring: Solid Wood Flooring Specialists
Period homes in Springfield (CM2) rarely need a modern floor — they usually need the right older floor, done properly. On 1930s semi homes we start every survey by asking whether the existing floor can be restored: 60% of Springfield Victorian and Edwardian reception rooms have an original pine or oak floor under carpet that only needs sanding and finishing.

What we look for on a Springfield period floor survey
Where restoration isn't viable — water damage, joist collapse, past DIY laminate over screwed boards — we replicate the original spec board by board. Same species, same width, same profile, same finish. No 'similar' compromises on Springfield period jobs.
Why Springfield clients book us for period homes
- Bona dust-extracted sanding — 95%+ debris capture on restorations
- Era-matched board width and finish specified from the survey
- Bona dust-extracted sanding — 95%+ debris capture on restorations
- Era-matched board width and finish specified from the survey
The era-correct spec for 1930s semi Springfield floors
Georgian (pre-1830) and Regency floors in Springfield: wide oak boards, secret-nailed, natural or hardwax-oil finished. Board widths 200–260mm, lengths 2.4m+. We source these boards through mill-direct reclaimed suppliers for restoration parity.
Local context
Includes the listed Springfield Park Tudor building
Nearest station
Chelmsford
Original detail preservation on Springfield period floors
Border details on 1930s semi Springfield floors — parquet with a plain-oak surround, contrasting parquet inlay strips, decorative herringbone with basket-weave centre panels — are part of the era. We replicate these on request, from the original pattern books where available.
Period Homes in Springfield — questions
- Is engineered wood appropriate for a Springfield period home?
- In some rooms yes, in others no. Rear extensions and kitchen additions on Springfield period homes take engineered wood well. Original reception rooms should keep solid timber or matched parquet where possible.
- Can you fill the gaps between original boards on a Springfield period floor?
- Yes — resin fill for gaps 4mm+, sliver of matched timber for larger gaps. Result is seamless and stable through seasonal humidity cycles.
- How much for a Springfield period home floor restoration?
- Typical Springfield Victorian reception room (18–25m²) restoration: £1,650–£2,900 including sanding, gap-filling, whitewash or natural finish. New matched flooring in the same room: £2,800–£4,900.
- What board width suits a Springfield Victorian terrace?
- 120–160mm narrow strip pine or oak matches the Springfield Victorian era. Wider boards (200mm+) look wrong in a Victorian room — they belong in Georgian and Regency properties.
- Will the original floor take a modern hardwax oil finish in Springfield?
- Yes — hardwax oil is the closest modern equivalent to the original wax finishes on Springfield Victorian and Edwardian floors. Natural sheen, breathable, and re-coatable without sanding.
- How long does a period floor restoration take in Springfield?
- 5–10 working days for a typical Victorian or Edwardian reception room in Springfield, including gap-filling, sanding, staining trial, finish coats and cure. Longer for whole ground-floor restorations.
Get a period floor quote for Springfield
48-hour written quote — restoration, matched replacement or era-correct new floor.
Period homes in Springfield usually need the right older floor, done properly — not a modern replacement in the wrong era.