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COUSINS HARDWOOD FLOORS
Highly Skilled & Passionate Wood Flooring Craftsmen

Wood Flooring in Fire Island, NY 11770

Highly Recommended Flooring Company Expertly Installs Vinyl Wood Flooring in Fire Island, NY

During a recent visit to your neighbor’s home, you stopped short. You were stunned by a recent flooring renovation. The new hardwood floors were stunning. But wait, are they solid hardwood floors? Nowadays you can buy vinyl flooring that looks like wood. Vinyl wood flooring offers the appearance of woodgrain, colors, and textures with low maintenance and many advantages over solid hardwood.

By updating to vinyl wood flooring, your home will gain instant refreshment and beauty at an affordable price. Even better, homeowners in Fire Island, NY don’t need to handle a flooring project alone. Cousins Hardwood Floors are vinyl wood flooring experts in Suffolk County and always ready to help. These experts can help you decipher through the many types of flooring available, including the differences between hardwood flooring and vinyl wood flooring.

What is Vinyl Wood Flooring?

Vinyl wood flooring gives the elegant appearance of wood but unlike solid wood, it’s

100% waterproof. That makes it ideal to be installed in most rooms of your home – including kitchens, bathrooms and basements. Vinyl wood flooring can be installed over existing surfaces like tile, vinyl, wood – even concrete.

Vinyl wood flooring is the perfect solution when a homeowner is looking for a wood look but solid hardwood flooring costs too high for the flooring project budget. Vinyl wood flooring comes in sheets, planks or tiles and is available in a variety of colors. From brown, gray, tan, orange and black to blue, red and white, there is a shade to match every decor and style.

Vinyl wood flooring is easy to maintain – simply clean with a broom, duster, mop or vacuum. Vinyl is scratch and stain resistant and provides a warm and comfortable feel. It is a more affordable option to hardwood and does not require refinishing. Vinyl flooring is ideal when installed in high traffic areas and is pet friendly.

What is Solid Hardwood Flooring?

Solid hardwood flooring is a popular favorite among homeowners in Fire Island, NY because of its classic, elegant and timeless appearance. Hardwood flooring also provides a great return on investment. Solid hardwood is pure wood from top to bottom and could be selected in oak, maple, cherry, ash, walnut, hickory, bamboo and other woods. Hardwood floors blend in well with a variety of decor styles.

The downside of solid hardwood flooring is that it is costly and can be scuffed, scratched and dented. With that being said, it is recommended that hardwood flooring be refinished every 5 to 10 years. Covering solid hardwood flooring with throw rugs or runners could help to cut down on required maintenance. Solid hardwood is not waterproof so it is not recommended for high moisture areas like kitchens and bathrooms.

What is Engineered Hardwood Flooring?

The best way to provide an explanation of engineered hardwood is to define solid hardwood. Solid hardwood is a single piece of wood with no layers. Engineered hardwood flooring is constructed of layers – a fused mix of hardwood and plywood.

Vinyl Wood Flooring in Albertson, NY

So yes, engineered hardwood flooring is made of real wood. The top layer is the hardwood that is then backed by multiple layers of wood material. The multiple layers allow for movement in high humidity areas, making it more stable than solid wood. Engineered hardwood flooring is available in a variety of colors and costs less than solid hardwood. It’s also easier to install than solid hardwood. Solid wood requires nailing or gluing to subflooring. Engineered hardwood can simply be installed as a floating floor. Unlike solid hardwood flooring, engineered hardwood flooring can be installed in basements, garages, and kitchens.

Choosing The Right Flooring For Your Home in Fire Island, NY

When selecting flooring for your home, one thing is certain; once the floor is installed, it’s installed. If you select the wrong floor, it’s too late to change your mind. Therefore, when planning a flooring project, a homeowner must do a bit of flooring homework to ensure selecting a floor that meets the demands of the room. Flooring is more than just to provide a desired look. It has to be durable to withstand foot traffic, kids, pets and occasional mishaps. Of course, it also has to blend in with the room colors, furnishings and decorative elements.

What Rooms are Part of Your Flooring Project?

When selecting flooring in Suffolk County, you need to evaluate what room will have the new flooring installed. Will you install different flooring for each room or do you prefer to install one continuous floor throughout the home? The next question would be to determine the floor demands of those rooms. A hallway would be considered a heavy foot traffic area. Kitchens and bathrooms would be rooms with higher moisture levels. Moisture levels will instigate the decision whether to select solid hardwood, engineered hardwood or vinyl wood flooring. Rest assured, the flooring experts at Cousins Hardwood Floors will help you decide.

What Makes Cousins Hardwood Floors a Highly Recommended Vinyl Wood Flooring Company in Suffolk County?

There is something special about a company like Cousins Hardwood Floors that is family owned and operated and also treats their customers like a part of the family. Cousins Hardwood Floors provides expert services and an outstanding selection while offering affordable rates. And while you may see other companies advertising flooring installation, it will be hard to match the quality and reputation of Cousins Hardwood Floors.

Cousins Hardwood Floors takes pride in serving repeat customers, who look to them for additional flooring installations and also recommending them to family, friends and neighbors in Fire Island, NY. Top notch flooring installations, friendly customer service and satisfaction guaranteed is what flooring customers can expect from Cousins Hardwood Floors. If you already own hardwood flooring, Cousins Hardwood Floors can also refinish your hardwood floors.

Contact Cousins Hardwood Floors Today To Get New Flooring in Fire Island, NY

Whether you are looking to replace all flooring throughout a home or just one room, the Cousins Hardwood Floors experts are standing by to help you select ideal flooring in Suffolk County. From selecting between vinyl wood flooring, solid hardwood flooring or engineered hardwood flooring, Cousins Hardwood Floors will answer all of your questions and discuss all options including color and wood types.

Start your flooring project today. Call 631-782-5154 to learn more or to schedule a FREE consultation with a flooring expert. At Cousins Hardwood Floors, our professionals will guide you from start to finish with your Fire Island wood flooring project. We guarantee your satisfaction.


Some information about Fire Island, NY

Fire Island is the large center island of the outer barrier islands parallel to the south shore of Long Island, New York.

Though it is well established that indigenous Native Americans occupied what are today known as Long Island and Fire Island for many centuries before Europeans arrived, there has existed a long-standing myth that Long Island and nearby Fire Island were occupied by ‘thirteen tribes’ ‘neatly divided into thirteen tribal units, beginning with the Canarsie who lived in present-day Brooklyn and ending with the Montauk on the far eastern end of the island.’ Modern ethnographic research indicates, however, that before the European invasion, Long Island and Fire Island were occupied by ‘indigenous groups […] organized into village systems with varying levels of social complexity. They lived in small communities that were connected in an intricate web of kinship relations […] there were probably no native peoples living in tribal systems on Long Island until after the Europeans arrived. […] The communities appear to have been divided into two general culture areas that overlapped in the area known today as the Hempstead Plains […]. The western groups spoke the Delaware-Munsee dialect of Algonquian and shared cultural characteristics such as the longhouse system of social organization with their brethren in what is now New Jersey and Delaware. The linguistic affiliation of the eastern groups is less well understood […] Goddard […] concluded that the languages here are related to the southern New England Algonquian dialects, but he could only speculate on the nature of these relationships […]. Working with a few brief vocabulary lists of Montauk and Unquachog, he suggested that the Montauk might be related to Mohegan-Pequot and the Unquachog might possibly be grouped with the Quiripi of western Connecticut. The information on the Shinnecock was too sparse for any determination […] The most common pattern of indigenous life on Long Island prior to the intervention of the whites was the autonomous village linked by kinship to its neighbors.’

‘Most of the ‘tribal’ names with which we are now familiar do not appear to have been recognized by either the first European observers or by the original inhabitants until the process of land purchases began after the first settlements were established. We simply do not know what these people called themselves, but all the ethnographic data on North American Indian cultures suggest that they identified themselves in terms of lineage and clan membership. […] The English and Dutch were frustrated by this lack of structure because it made land purchase so difficult. Deeds, according to the European concept of property, had to be signed by identifiable owners with authority to sell and have specific boundaries on a map. The relatively amorphous leadership structure of the Long Island communities, the imprecise delineation of hunting ground boundaries, and their view of the land as a living entity to be used rather than owned made conventional European real estate deals nearly impossible to negotiate. The surviving primary records suggest that the Dutch and English remedied this situation by pressing cooperative local sachems to establish a more structured political base in their communities and to define their communities as ‘tribes’ with specific boundaries […] The Montauk, under the leadership of Wyandanch in the mid-seventeenth century, and the Matinnecock, under the sachems Suscaneman and Tackapousha, do appear to have developed rather tenuous coalitions as a result of their contact with the English settlers.’

‘An early example of [European] intervention into Native American political institutions is a 1664 agreement wherein the East Hampton and Southampton officials appointed a sunk squaw named Quashawam to govern both the Shinnecock and the Montauk.’

Learn more about Fire Island.

Directions from Fire Island, NY to Cousins Hardwood Floors


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