The Pacific Northwest's climate creates specific challenges for flooring. With humidity levels swinging from 45% in summer to 85%+ in winter, solid hardwood can cup and gap seasonally if not properly acclimated and installed with the right expansion gaps. That's why engineered hardwood and luxury vinyl plank (LVP) have become the dominant choices in Burien. LVP is 100% waterproof, dimensionally stable, and today's premium products (COREtec, Shaw Floorte, Mohawk RevWood) are virtually indistinguishable from real wood. For Burien homes valued around $525,000, flooring projects range from $2,000 for a main-floor LVP install to $9,000 for whole-house solid hardwood or natural stone.
Burien sits just south of Seattle along the Puget Sound coastline, where the community's mid-century heritage and ongoing revitalization create a compelling remodeling market. The neighborhood surrounding Three Tree Point — a quiet residential peninsula jutting into Puget Sound — features waterfront and water-view homes where premium kitchen and bathroom remodels are common. The streets radiating from the Burien Town Square along SW 152nd Street showcase the city's 1950s and 1960s core housing stock: modest but well-built ramblers and Cape Cod-style homes with original kitchens that feature linoleum floors, metal-edged countertops, and painted wood cabinets. The Gregory Heights neighborhood offers slightly newer 1970s construction, while the Seahurst area near Seahurst Beach Park draws families with its combination of natural beauty and reasonable home prices. Burien's diverse community — with significant Latin American and East African populations — has transformed the city's culinary landscape along Ambaum Boulevard, and this diversity extends to kitchen remodeling preferences with homeowners requesting features suited to various cooking traditions. At a median home value of about $525,000, Burien represents excellent remodeling value for homeowners looking to modernize older homes without the price premium of Seattle or the Eastside.
Our flooring installation process starts with subfloor assessment. In Burien's 55-year-old homes, we commonly find: original hardwood under carpet (which may be refinishable), plywood subflooring that needs leveling, concrete slabs with moisture issues (tested with calcium chloride or relative humidity probes), and outdated vinyl or linoleum that may contain asbestos (pre-1986 homes). We test and address every issue before any new flooring goes down. Proper subfloor prep is 70% of a successful flooring installation — it's where shortcuts cause squeaks, lippage, and premature failure.
Burien's remodeling economics are favorable: at a median home value of about $525,000 and labor rates below Seattle proper, homeowners get significant renovation scope for practical budgets. The city's proximity to Sea-Tac Airport means some homes experience aircraft noise that requires soundproofing consideration during window replacement associated with kitchen or bathroom additions. Burien's recent Town Square redevelopment has revitalized the city center and boosted property values in surrounding neighborhoods, creating both the equity and the motivation for homeowners to invest in their interiors.
Verified activity