Engineered hardwood

Wide-plank engineered, finished how the homeowner wants. Quoted in minutes.

VEVVO handles glue-down, floating, and nail-down engineered jobs with the SKU detail and moisture documentation the install actually needs.

Engineered hardwood is the most-quoted product category in remodel work today. It looks like solid hardwood, installs over concrete or radiant heat without the cupping risk, and ships in wide planks customers love. But the wrong install method, the wrong adhesive, or the wrong moisture spec turns a pretty floor into a callback. VEVVO captures the technical detail that matters and presents the customer-facing quote that closes.

Glue-down, floating, and nail-down as separate services

The same SKU can install three different ways with very different labor costs and material needs. Build each install method as its own service in your catalog — Engineered Glue-Down at one rate, Floating with underlayment at another, Nail-Down on plywood subfloor at a third. The right one drops onto the quote in a single tap.

Wide-plank SKUs with manufacturer lead times

A 7-inch white oak European-cut plank from a boutique mill isn't on a warehouse shelf — it's on a four-week lead time. Per-SKU inventory tracks each product with its supplier and lead time, so you don't promise an install date the material can't hit.

Moisture and adhesive documentation per job

Custom job fields let you log slab moisture (calcium chloride or RH probe), adhesive used, and trowel size — the three data points that decide whether a glue-down install holds for ten years or fails in eighteen months. Photos of the readings live on the job record forever, so a callback in 2027 has the documentation it needs.

Frequently asked questions

Can I track which adhesive went on which job?+

Yes. Custom job fields capture the adhesive SKU, batch number, and trowel size — Bostik, Mapei, Sika, whichever you run. The data is searchable across jobs so warranty disputes don't turn into archaeology.

What about engineered floors over radiant heat?+

Per-product fields flag radiant compatibility, and a custom job field for max-floor-temp documentation gives you a paper trail when a homeowner cranks the system above spec.

How does this differ from the solid hardwood module?+

Same workspace, different service-catalog entries. Most engineered shops also do solid hardwood — the catalog grows with the work you take on.

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