4 Qualified Chesapeake, VA Flooring Contractors
1 Review
“He does hardwood flooring for us. Joe is great. He is an excellent flooring contractor.”
348 Biernot Avenue, Chesapeake, VA 23321
Biernot Floors, Inc. provides sales,installation and refinishing of hardwood floors for all residential and commercial customers in Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Norfolk and Suffolk areas. Whether you need a new wood floor installed or you have an existing flooring that needs to be refinished you can ...
1 Review
“They installed wood flooring. J.B. Courtney did a fabulous job. I have already referred several people to them and w...”
Serving Chesapeake Flooring Needs
At J.B. Courtney - Division of Shaffer Flooring, hardwood flooring is an art. Our floors are an extension of the caring craftsmanship embodied in our customer-oriented philosophy. From large commercial locations to countless homes and businesses, from basic Oak to prime Brazilian Cherry, from simple...
4 Reviews
“Installed Laminated and VCT Flooring Great Work”
Serving Chesapeake Flooring Needs
At Coradi Contracting we strive to provide our clients with quality service and exceptional results. We hope not only to gain new clients but more importantly keeping the present ones by maintaining the highest level of honesty , integrity and aggressive performance.
At Coradi Contracting hard su...
2 Reviews
“laminate florring Tom's estimate was in the middle of several of the other estimates that we received. His pleasant ...”
Serving Chesapeake Flooring Needs License: 2705137149
A new museum, dedicated to slavery in America, was supposed to open shortly. Instead, the 100,000-square-foot United States National Slavery Museum filed for bankruptcy. The flooring contractors in Chesapeake, Virginia were hired to install an elaborate 450-seat theater, a full-scale replica slave ship was being built, and hundreds of donated relics such as the leg irons many Americans wore during the long, cruel voyage from West Africa were to be on display. But the museum filed for bankruptcy, leaving donors and supporters wondering what went wrong. The museum apparently had too many expenses and couldn’t afford to pay for floor installation and Chesapeake contractors anymore, so the project was put on hold.