Chaska mixes 19th-century brick charm downtown with brand-new neighborhoods up the hill. We've worked both — leveling hundred-year-old floors and finishing builder-fresh bathrooms the builder never quite finished right.
Porcelain and ceramic laid dead-flat, with membrane waterproofing behind every wet area. Backsplashes, fireplaces and heated floors included.
Acclimated, gapped and laid over a flattened subfloor — so Chaska's humidity swings never buckle a board.
The invisible work that decides whether a floor lasts: straightedge checks, self-leveling compound, moisture testing and membranes.
Older Chaska homes settle — floors dip toward the middle of the room, and tile laid straight over that cracks along the joists. Self-leveling compound and proper substrate prep are non-negotiable here. In the newer builds, we mostly replace rushed builder tile with work that's actually flat.
Not directly — and anyone who says yes is setting you up for cracked grout. We level first with self-leveling compound, then tile. That's why our floors stay flat.
We can get close — and where an exact match is impossible, we'll design a border or transition that looks intentional rather than patched.
Both. Homeowners are our core, but we take select builder and remodeler partnerships when the schedule allows.
Tell us about the room. Tim answers the phone, walks the space and installs the job himself.