Lian Construction's home borough — Kingston is our base, so response times and local knowledge here are the fastest of anywhere we cover. Kingston upon Thames is our home borough, so scheduling, materials and site visits here are the most straightforward of anywhere Lian Construction works. For plasterboard and ceiling repairs in Kingston upon Thames, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.
Kingston upon Thames sits in the outer south-west of London, and like much of this part of the city its housing stock spans several distinct eras. Victorian and Edwardian terraces are common in the older residential streets, typically solid brick construction with bay windows and original roof structures that need periodic attention as they age. Alongside these sit the 1930s suburban semis and detached houses typical of London's outer boroughs, built during the interwar expansion of the suburbs along transport links. More recent additions include postwar housing and riverside or town-centre apartment blocks, plus a steady stream of loft conversions and rear extensions as owners adapt older properties to modern living. This mix gives the borough a genuinely varied repair and refurbishment profile: older properties often need roofing, damp or structural attention that reflects their age, while newer builds tend to need different work such as extensions, internal reconfiguration or snagging. Being based here gives us regular, hands-on exposure to this full range of property types, from Victorian terrace roofs to more modern extension projects, which helps when it comes to diagnosing issues quickly.
Because Kingston is where Lian Construction is based, this is the area where we have the most day-to-day presence and the shortest travel time between jobs. That matters in practice for anything urgent, from a roof leak after a storm to emergency boarding up, since being close by usually means we can get someone out sooner than if we were travelling in from further across London. It also means our local knowledge is at its strongest here, including familiarity with common issues in the area's housing stock, the types of materials and finishes that tend to suit older versus newer properties, and the practical realities of parking, access and working on busy residential streets. For homeowners and landlords, that translates into a contractor who already knows the borough rather than one learning it on the job. Demand for repair and refurbishment work in Kingston, as in much of outer London, tends to be fairly steady rather than limited to occasional spikes, with owners maintaining older housing stock, converting lofts and updating rental properties between tenancies. Being based locally lets us respond to that ongoing demand without the delays that come from covering a wider area thinly.
Common types of plasterboard damage in London homes
Impact damage is the most frequent repair we see, door handles punched through a wall, furniture moved carelessly, or a corner knocked during a house move, and these are usually quick, contained repairs. Water damage is more involved, a leak from above or a burst pipe can leave a ceiling section saturated and sagging, and that board almost always needs replacing rather than repairing, since waterlogged plasterboard loses its structural integrity even if it looks intact once dry. Cracking along joints, particularly where a ceiling meets a wall or along a taped seam, is common in older properties where slight movement over the years has worked the joint loose, and this needs re-taping properly rather than simply filling the crack, which tends to reopen within months. Nail pops, where a fixing works its way slightly proud of the board surface and pushes a small dome through the paint, are another common defect in older properties fixed with nails rather than screws, and while the fix is simple, driving the nail back or replacing it with a screw slightly to one side and reskimming, it's easy to mistake for something more serious if you're not familiar with what's causing it. Blown plaster, where the skim coat has separated from the board underneath and sounds hollow when tapped, is another finish-level defect worth catching early, since left alone it eventually flakes away from the wall entirely and takes a section of paint with it. Artex and textured ceilings common in mid-to-late twentieth century London homes bring their own complication, since a smooth plasterboard patch stands out clearly against a textured surrounding surface unless it's either textured to match or the whole ceiling is skimmed over. It's worth noting that Artex applied before the mid-1980s can contain asbestos, so any repair involving cutting, sanding or disturbing an older textured ceiling needs a sensible check first, since the risk isn't from an undisturbed ceiling but from the dust created by working on it without knowing what it contains. Cracking along ceiling joints has a seasonal pattern too in some properties, as timber joists and roof structures expand and contract slightly with temperature and humidity changes through the year, and a crack that reappears every winter in roughly the same spot often points to that kind of ongoing minor movement rather than a one-off failure, which affects how we specify the repair to accommodate it. A flexible joint compound or a slightly different taping approach at a known movement point can reduce the chance of the same crack reopening the following year, compared with treating it exactly like a one-off impact repair.
Choosing the right board for the room
Not every repair should use standard plasterboard, and specifying the wrong type is a common shortcut that causes problems later. Moisture-resistant board, easily identified by its green face paper, is the right choice for bathrooms, kitchens, utility rooms and any area with sustained humidity, since standard board absorbs moisture and can soften or promote mould growth in these conditions over time. Fire-rated board, usually pink or identifiable by its denser core, is required in specific locations under Building Regulations, particularly in HMOs, between a garage and habitable space, and around escape routes, where the board itself forms part of the fire separation between rooms or units. Acoustic or sound-resistant board is worth considering in party wall repairs or between flats, where noise transfer between neighbours is a common source of complaint and a like-for-like standard board repair does nothing to improve on the original performance. We'll flag where the room calls for something other than standard board, even on a small repair, rather than defaulting to whatever's already on the van. Thickness and density also affect performance beyond fire and moisture resistance, a thicker board gives a modest improvement in sound insulation and general robustness against knocks, which is worth considering in a hallway, stairwell or heavily used family room where standard board tends to take the most day-to-day damage. Cost differences between board types are relatively modest compared with the labour involved in a repair, so specifying the correct board rarely changes the overall price of the job by much, but it does change how well the repair holds up, which makes it a fairly easy decision to get right once it's actually raised at quoting stage rather than assumed.