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Refurbishment contractors in Hackney

Property Refurbishment in Hackney, London

From strip-out and structural alterations through to plastering, tiling, decorating and handover, Lian Construction manages the full refurbishment programme under one accountable team. Homeowners, landlords and commercial clients use us when they want a single contractor rather than fragmented trades.

Hackney overview

Property Refurbishment in Hackney

148 Checkatrade listings but a fragmented market with no dominant brand — heavy Article 4 planning activity and steady gentrification-driven refurbishment demand. Hackney falls well within the East London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For full property refurbishment projects in Hackney, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.

Hackney's housing stock is dominated by Victorian and Edwardian terraces, many split into flats, alongside a good number of converted warehouses and ex-industrial buildings from the borough's manufacturing past. There's also a substantial amount of post-war council housing, ranging from low-rise blocks to larger estates, sitting close to streets of period terraces. This mix means the borough has a wide spread of jobs for contractors, from internal reconfiguration of Victorian conversions to communal repairs on estate blocks. Given the heavy Article 4 planning activity referenced locally, a meaningful share of this stock sits within conservation areas, where the usual Victorian and Edwardian terrace features (sash windows, slate roofs, original brick facades, decorative frontages) are more tightly protected than elsewhere in London. As with much of inner London, solid wall construction is common, which has implications for insulation and damp work. Property owners taking on refurbishment in Hackney are often dealing with buildings that have already been altered more than once, so matching existing detailing and working around previous non-standard interventions is a regular part of the job here.

Hackney shows a high volume of construction activity on Checkatrade (148 listings) but no single contractor or brand has established a clear lead, which makes the market fragmented. For homeowners and landlords, this generally means more choice but also more variability in quality and pricing, so getting quotes from a few established firms and checking references carefully is worth the extra time. The borough's heavy Article 4 planning activity adds another layer: permitted development rights are withdrawn in many areas, so alterations that would be straightforward elsewhere often need a full planning application first. This tends to lengthen project timelines and makes it more important to work with a contractor who understands local planning requirements rather than just the build itself. On top of that, steady gentrification-driven refurbishment demand means many properties are being upgraded to modern standards, from kitchen and bathroom renovations to loft conversions and full internal refits, often as part of a wider push to bring older housing stock up to current expectations. Landlords in particular are likely refurbishing between tenancies or ahead of resale, so demand for reliable, planning-aware contractors in Hackney tends to stay consistent rather than seasonal.

Given the level of Article 4 planning activity in Hackney, many homeowners will find that permitted development rights, which normally allow smaller works like some rear extensions, roof alterations or replacement windows without planning permission, have been removed in their area. This means a full planning application is often required even for changes that would be minor elsewhere in London. If your property sits within a conservation area, expect additional scrutiny on materials and appearance, particularly for anything visible from the street, such as windows, doors, roofing materials and front boundary treatments. It's worth checking your property's specific Article 4 status and conservation area designation with the council before finalising any design, since this affects both timeline and what materials or approaches are realistically achievable.

Coordinating trades so nothing gets duplicated or wasted

A refurbishment usually needs electricians, plumbers, plasterers, tilers and decorators on site at different points, and the order they work in matters as much as the quality of each trade individually. First-fix electrics and plumbing need to go in before boarding and plastering close the walls up, and any changes to socket positions or radiator points are far cheaper to make at that stage than after decoration. We hold that sequence with one point of contact managing it, rather than leaving it to whichever trade happens to be booked next, which is how jobs end up with a plasterer skimming over a chase that still needed a second cable, or a decorator painting a wall that plumbing needs to come back and open up. Snagging is built into the process at the end rather than treated as an afterthought, so small defects like a poorly fitted door or a paint touch-up get picked up and closed off before we consider the job finished, not weeks later when you notice them yourself. At handover, we walk the property with you room by room against the original scope, rather than simply handing back keys, so anything that needs a final touch is agreed and actioned there and then instead of becoming a list of small grievances weeks later. We also leave a short pack of information behind at handover, covering things like which paint colours and tile references were used and where key isolation points are, so small maintenance jobs later on don't turn into guesswork.

Built for London property stock

London homes rarely need only cosmetic upgrades. Victorian and Edwardian terraces often have solid brick walls holding rising or penetrating damp, a mix of original lath and plaster ceilings with later plasterboard patches, and floor levels that have crept out of true after a century of settlement and past alterations. Ex-council flats and maisonettes bring their own quirks, concrete floors that limit where cables can be chased in, older single-glazed metal windows, shared party floors with limited sound insulation, and communal pipework a private refurbishment has to work around rather than replace outright. Loft spaces in older houses are frequently under-insulated or part-boarded in a way that blocks ventilation, and skirting and door linings are rarely square once a property has moved with age, which affects how new flooring and fitted joinery need to be scribed in. We handle damp damage, tired plasterboard, dated layouts, roof issues, uneven substrates and compliance-led improvements as part of one joined-up plan, rather than treating each as a separate job needing its own contractor and its own site visit. Where a property has more than one of these issues at once, which is common in London's older stock, dealing with them together in the right order is almost always cheaper than fixing them one at a time later, since reopening a finished wall or ceiling to deal with something missed the first time costs more than catching it during the original strip-out. Georgian and early Victorian properties can add timber floor structures and lime-based plaster into the mix too, both of which behave differently from modern materials and need repairing on their own terms rather than with a standard modern fix. Ventilation is another factor that's often overlooked, solid-wall Victorian properties rely on being able to breathe, and sealing them up with the wrong modern materials, such as an impermeable render or vinyl wall covering over a damp solid wall, tends to trap moisture rather than solve it.

Full house, flat and commercial refurbishments
Structural, repair and finishing trades coordinated together
Clear scopes for occupied homes, rentals and investment properties
Regular coverage of Hackney and the wider East London area

Signs to look for

Do you need property refurbishment in Hackney?

  • You're planning a loft conversion, extension or knock-through alongside other improvement work and want it all sequenced as one coordinated project.
  • You've bought a property that needs full modernisation before you can move in comfortably, rather than living through years of piecemeal upgrades.
  • A rental property needs bringing up to standard between tenancies or before re-letting, including any compliance-related works the new tenancy requires.
  • Several separate trades would otherwise need booking and coordinating without a single contractor overseeing the sequence, timing and quality between them, adding time, cost and risk of things being missed.

How the work is handled in Hackney

  1. Step 1Survey the property and define the scope
  2. Step 2Price the works clearly
  3. Step 3Coordinate trades and materials
  4. Step 4Complete snagging before handover

Questions

Property Refurbishment questions in Hackney

How quickly can Lian start full property refurbishment projects in Hackney?

Hackney is part of our regular East London coverage, so once we've surveyed the property we can usually confirm a start date quickly. Send the address and scope and we'll arrange the next step.

Do you cover all of Hackney?

Yes. Hackney falls within the area Lian Construction serves across Greater London.

Do I need to move out during a full refurbishment?

It depends on scope. A single room or light-touch update can often be done with you living in the property, but a full strip-out involving structural work, rewiring or replastering throughout is usually easier and faster with the property vacant.

Do you handle planning permission and Building Control as part of the project?

We manage the Building Control notifications and inspections that structural work requires, and coordinate with a structural engineer where calculations are needed for beams or openings. For planning permission, particularly on extensions, loft conversions or anything in a conservation area, we'll flag early whether your project is likely to need consent so you're not caught out partway through, though the application itself is usually handled by an architect or planning consultant we can work alongside. Listed building consent is a separate, stricter process again, and alterations that would be routine in an unlisted property, such as replacing windows or removing a fireplace, can require consent even when they don't need standard planning permission, so it's worth flagging if your property is listed or in a conservation area at the enquiry stage.

What's typically included in a refurbishment quote, and what might be excluded?

A refurbishment quote usually covers labour, materials, waste removal and site protection for the agreed scope of work. It typically excludes items you choose separately, such as sanitaryware, kitchen units, flooring and light fittings, unless we've agreed to source them for you. Structural engineer's fees, Building Control fees and party wall surveyor costs, where they apply, are usually itemised separately too, since they depend on the scope of structural work rather than the size of the property. We usually structure payment against stages of completed work rather than a single sum upfront, so you're only paying for work that's actually been done, and any variations agreed along the way are added as separate, itemised lines rather than folded quietly into the final invoice. It's worth asking any contractor for a written breakdown before committing, not just a total figure, so you can compare quotes properly and understand what happens if the scope needs to change once work is underway.

Can you refurbish flats in purpose-built or ex-council blocks, not just houses?

Yes. Ex-council and purpose-built flats have their own constraints, such as concrete floors that limit where cables and pipes can be chased in, freeholder or managing agent permissions for certain works, and lift access or waste carry-distance that affects programme and cost. We factor these in at survey stage, and where the block has specific rules about noisy work hours or waste disposal, we work within them rather than treating the flat like a standalone house. Many blocks also require a refundable deposit or a method statement before work starts, and if there's a lift, we'll usually need to book protection for it in advance to avoid damage during the noisiest phases of strip-out and delivery.

Talk to Lian Construction about Hackney

Send the site address in Hackney, photos if available, and the property refurbishment work you need. We can review the scope and arrange the next step.

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