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Fire door installation in Lambeth

Fire door installation in Lambeth, London

Lian Construction supplies and installs FD30 and FD60 fire doors across London for landlords, letting agents and block managers, fitted to the gap tolerances, seals and closer settings that make a certified fire door actually work as tested. We handle single door replacements for individual flats and full programmes across blocks and HMO portfolios, working around occupied properties and reporting back with photographic evidence for fire safety files and licensing inspections.

Lambeth overview

Fire door installation in Lambeth

Clapham, Brixton and Pimlico-adjacent streets with a healthy mix of refurbishment volume and manageable competition. Lambeth sits around 9 miles from our Kingston upon Thames base, well inside the South London ground we cover on a regular basis. For fire door installation work in Lambeth, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.

Lambeth's residential streets, particularly around Clapham, Brixton and the areas bordering Pimlico, are dominated by housing stock typical of inner south London: Victorian and Edwardian terraces, many long since split into flats and maisonettes. Alongside these sit purpose-built mansion blocks from the early twentieth century and pockets of post-war and ex-local authority housing, a pattern common across much of inner London where original street layouts survived but individual buildings were subdivided, extended or replaced over the decades. This mix means refurbishment work in the area rarely follows one template. A single street can include a converted terrace flat with shared access and party walls, a self-contained Victorian house, and a mid-century block, each with different structural quirks, service runs and access constraints. Older properties commonly bring the issues associated with ageing housing stock: outdated wiring and plumbing, solid or poorly insulated walls, and roofs that have had several past repairs rather than one full replacement. A contractor working here needs to be equally comfortable adapting to a period conversion as to a more straightforward modern refurbishment.

The blend of refurbishment volume and manageable competition around Clapham, Brixton and the Pimlico-adjacent streets reflects an area with steady demand but without the sheer density of contractors chasing every job that you'd find in some more central boroughs. A large share of the housing stock is ageing and in continuous need of upkeep, upgrading or conversion work, which keeps a fairly constant flow of refurbishment, repair and roofing enquiries coming from both owner-occupiers and landlords. For homeowners, this generally means it's possible to get a contractor booked in and a quote turned around without the long waiting lists seen in busier parts of London, though good tradespeople are still in demand and it pays to book ahead for larger projects. For landlords managing flats or converted houses in the area, the practical implication is similar: routine maintenance and larger refurbishment work can usually be scheduled without excessive delay, but it's still worth getting multiple quotes and checking availability early, particularly for work that needs to happen between tenancies or during void periods.

Who is legally responsible for fire doors in London properties

The Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 puts a duty on the responsible person, usually the freeholder, managing agent or landlord, to maintain fire doors on common escape routes in blocks of flats, HMOs and other multi-occupied buildings. The Fire Safety (England) Regulations 2022 added specific checks for blocks with communal areas: quarterly checks on fire doors in common parts and, where the responsible person can gain access, annual checks on flat entrance doors, including making sure self-closers work and doors close fully onto the latch. For HMOs, most London boroughs run mandatory or additional licensing schemes under the Housing Act 2004, and fire doors with self-closers to bedrooms, kitchens and other rooms opening onto escape routes are checked at the licensing inspection, alongside fire alarms and emergency lighting. Buildings over 18 metres or seven storeys fall under the Building Safety Act 2022 regime, with tighter record-keeping expectations. None of this makes an individual landlord a fire engineer, but it does mean fire doors need to be specified, fitted and recorded properly rather than treated as a standard joinery job, and having evidence of correct installation matters as much as the door itself.

What drives the cost of a fire door installation

Price varies more than people expect, mostly because of what's around the door rather than the door itself. A standard FD30 doorset in a modern opening is more straightforward than one for a Victorian conversion with an out-of-square frame or a non-standard width, which needs packing, planing or a bespoke doorset order. Glazed vision panels add cost because they need fire-rated glass, usually Georgian wired or a clear pyrolytic type, set in matching intumescent beading rather than ordinary bead. Finish matters too: a painted softwood doorset costs less than a pre-finished oak veneer set specified to match existing joinery in a period conversion. Ironmongery spec, whether that's a simple latch or a lock with access control cabling routed through, adds time. Removing and disposing of the old door and frame, then making good the architrave, decoration and sometimes plaster reveals, is often underestimated. Access is a real factor on blocks, working around occupied flats, booking a lift or porter's assistance in an ex-council block, or fitting around a lease's permitted working hours all affect programme length. A single doorset call-out costs more per door than a block or portfolio programme, where doors are ordered and fitted in batches.

FD30 and FD60 certified doorsets
Intumescent strips, cold smoke seals and self-closers fitted correctly
Fire door surveys for HMOs and blocks
Regular coverage of Lambeth and the wider South London area

Signs to look for

Do you need fire door installation in Lambeth?

  • The door doesn't close fully onto the latch by itself, or it catches and sticks on the frame or floor when swinging shut.
  • Gaps around the door edge look wider than a couple of millimetres, or daylight is visible around the frame when it's closed.
  • Intumescent or smoke seals are missing, painted over, or coming loose from their grooves in the door or frame edge.
  • The self-closing device has been unscrewed, disconnected, or the door is regularly propped open with a wedge or fire extinguisher.

How the work is handled in Lambeth

  1. Step 1Confirm the required door schedule
  2. Step 2Supply certified doorsets
  3. Step 3Install to correct tolerances
  4. Step 4Gauge, photograph and sign off each door

Questions

Fire door installation questions in Lambeth

How quickly can Lian start fire door installation work in Lambeth?

Lambeth is part of our regular South 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 Lambeth?

Yes. Lambeth falls within the area Lian Construction serves from our Kingston upon Thames base, alongside the rest of Greater London.

Does the new door's finish have to match the rest of the property?

It doesn't have to, but it usually should for the room to look finished. Certified doorsets are available pre-finished in a range of veneers, laminates or as a paint-grade skin ready for site decoration, and we'd normally match the new door to the existing joinery, skirting or other doors in the property where that's straightforward. On a single flat entrance door replacement in a block, matching the finish used on neighbouring doors is often expected by the managing agent for consistency along the corridor, and it's worth checking that before ordering rather than after.

What if a fire door gets damaged or scored after it's been fitted?

It depends on the damage. Superficial scuffs or scratches to the surface finish don't usually affect the door's fire performance and can be touched up or repainted, taking care not to cover the seals or certification label. Deeper gouges, holes, or damage that's gone through the facing into the core are a different matter, since the certified performance relies on the leaf being intact as tested, and a door in that condition should be assessed rather than assumed to still be compliant. We can survey a damaged door and advise whether it's repairable or needs replacing.

What is the difference between FD30 and FD60?

FD30 doors resist fire for 30 minutes and are standard for HMO bedroom and kitchen doors. FD60 doors give 60 minutes and are used in higher-risk locations.

Can you survey our existing fire doors?

Yes. We can check certification evidence, gaps, seals and closers on existing doors and report which need repair or replacement.

Talk to Lian Construction about Lambeth

Send the site address in Lambeth, photos if available, and the fire door installation work you need. We can review the scope and arrange the next step.

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