If you’re looking for flooring in Erie, you’re probably trying to get ahead of something.
Maybe the house is newer, and the floors already look more “builder” than you want. Maybe you’re finishing a basement, and you don’t want to guess wrong on what works over concrete. Or maybe you’ve got hardwood upstairs that’s holding up fine overall, but the high-traffic paths are getting dull and scratched, and you want it cleaned up before it turns into a bigger job.
That’s the kind of work we do every day.
New Horizons Flooring is family-owned, local, and we serve Erie and the Denver metro. We install flooring that makes sense for Colorado homes, we refinish hardwood the right way, and we keep the process straightforward, clear plan, clean work, and no shortcuts that come back to bite you.
If you already have hardwood, refinishing is often the smartest upgrade. It’s how you get rid of worn lanes, scratches, and uneven sheen without replacing the floor. We sand down, repair what needs repair, stain if you want a change, then seal it with a finish that fits how you live.
We also use dust containment. Not “dustless,” but contained enough that the job doesn’t turn your home into a cleanup project.
Loose boards, squeaks, water spots near a door, pet damage, chipped edges, we repair hardwood so it blends. If the surrounding area is worn too, we’ll tell you straight, repair plus refinishing usually gives the cleanest result.
LVP is one of the most practical floors for basements and high-traffic rooms. It’s durable, water resistant, and easy to live with. The key is subfloor prep. If the surface isn’t flat, it feels hollow and the joints don’t stay tight. We handle prep so it feels solid and looks finished.
In a lot of homes, especially newer builds, the difference between “okay” and “nice” is in the details. Clean transitions. Straight layout. Proper leveling. No weird height changes from room to room.
We focus on:
subfloor prep, moisture where it matters, expansion gaps for wood, clean edges, and finishes that actually cure properly.
That’s how floors stay quiet, flat, and good-looking long-term.
Here’s the honest quick guide:
Hardwood works great for above-grade living areas and bedrooms.
Engineered hardwood makes sense for basements and slab areas.
Tile is best for wet rooms and entries.
LVP is great for basements and busy spaces where durability matters.
We’ll walk the space and recommend what fits your home and how you live in it.