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Wall and floor tiling in Lewisham

Tiling Contractors in Lewisham, London

Bathrooms, kitchens, floors and splashbacks across London are tiled by Lian Construction with proper substrate preparation, careful tile-line setting-out and durable grout, trims and sealants at the finish.

Lewisham overview

Tiling Contractors in Lewisham

Large Victorian and Edwardian housing stock with almost no dedicated roofing or refurbishment coverage from established competitors. Lewisham falls well within the South London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For bathroom, kitchen and floor tiling in Lewisham, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.

Lewisham's housing stock is dominated by Victorian and Edwardian terraces and bay-fronted semis, typical of the wave of building that spread across inner and near-inner London boroughs from the 1870s through to the 1910s. Expect solid brick external walls, slate or clay-tiled pitched roofs, timber sash windows, and party wall arrangements shared between neighbouring terraced properties. Many homes will have seen later alterations, loft conversions, rear extensions, or conversion into flats, which adds complexity when repair or refurbishment work touches roofline, guttering, or shared structural elements. Original slate roofing on housing of this age is now well over a century old in many cases, and a proportion will have already been part-replaced with concrete or synthetic tiles at some point, often inconsistently. This mix of original and patched-up roofing is common across older London housing stock generally. Bay windows, decorative brickwork, and chimney stacks typical of the period also mean roofing and refurbishment work often needs to account for period detailing rather than treating every job as a standard modern re-roof.

With such a large concentration of Victorian and Edwardian property, Lewisham has an ongoing and fairly predictable need for roof repair, re-roofing, and general refurbishment work, simply because housing stock of this age reaches the point where original materials need attention or full replacement. What stands out is the apparent gap in dedicated roofing and refurbishment coverage from established contractors in the area. For homeowners and landlords, that generally translates into longer waits for quotes, more reliance on general builders rather than roofing specialists, and less local choice when comparing contractors who actually focus on period property work. Landlords managing older converted or rented properties face this more acutely, since compliance-driven repairs (damp, roof leaks, structural issues) don't wait for convenient timing. A borough with this much ageing housing stock and limited specialist coverage tends to mean steady, ongoing demand rather than one-off spikes, which matters for anyone planning maintenance or budgeting for future works. It also means homeowners may need to look slightly further afield or be more selective when vetting who they bring in, since the usual density of local roofing specialists seen in some other London boroughs doesn't appear to be there yet.

Victorian and Edwardian terraces of the kind common in Lewisham are frequently found within conservation areas across London, a pattern seen widely in boroughs with this era of housing stock. Where a property sits inside a conservation area, roof alterations, changes to visible materials, or additions like rooflights and dormers may need planning permission rather than falling under permitted development. Even outside a conservation area, terraced and semi-detached houses of this age can have restricted permitted development rights depending on prior extensions or alterations already carried out. It's worth checking a property's specific planning history and conservation status with the local authority before finalising scope, particularly for anything visible from the street or affecting a shared roofline with a neighbouring property. This isn't unique to Lewisham, but it is a practical step worth building into any refurbishment timeline for period housing of this type.

Tiling on London's older housing stock

A lot of the tiling we do sits inside Victorian terraces, converted flats and ex-council properties, and each type of property brings its own quirks. Victorian solid walls can hold moisture, especially at ground floor level, so we check for damp before boarding and tiling over them rather than sealing a problem behind new tiles. Floors in older properties are rarely level, sometimes with a noticeable fall across a bathroom, which needs addressing with levelling compound or battening before any waterproofing membrane goes down. Ex-council flats built with concrete floors are usually flatter but can have their own issues around existing tanking or old adhesive residue that needs removing properly rather than tiled straight over. In converted or split properties, we also think about noise and shared services: chasing into a party wall for pipework, or working around a neighbour's ceiling below a wet room, needs care and sometimes coordination under the Party Wall Act where structural work runs alongside the tiling. Where a leaseholder or landlord is involved, we're used to working to the standard expected for handover or re-letting, including making good any areas disturbed during first fix work before the final tiling stage begins.

Looking after tiling once it's finished

Tiled surfaces need very little upkeep, but a few habits make the finish last. Wipe silicone seals dry after use in showers and around baths, since standing water is what breaks silicone down early. Use a normal pH-neutral cleaner on grout lines rather than strong bleach or acidic descalers, which wear grout out faster than day-to-day use ever would. If a grout line starts to crumble or a silicone seal goes black or pulls away from the tile edge, it's worth having it redone before water gets behind the tile rather than after. On kitchen splashbacks, keep an eye on the sealant where the tiling meets the worktop, as this joint moves slightly with the worktop and can open up over time. We don't offer a maintenance contract, but if a client gets in touch a year or two after a job with a seal that's failed or a grout line that's opened up, we're happy to take a look and quote for putting it right. Underfloor heating, if fitted, should be left off for the first couple of weeks after floor tiling to let the adhesive cure fully before it's exposed to heat.

Bathroom, kitchen, wall and floor tiling
Supply-and-fit or fit-only options
Substrate preparation and waterproofing support
Regular coverage of Lewisham and the wider South London area

Signs to look for

Do you need tiling contractors in Lewisham?

  • Tiles sound hollow or loose when tapped gently with a knuckle, suggesting the adhesive bond has failed and they could come away.
  • Silicone sealant around a bath, basin or shower tray has gone black, split or pulled away cleanly from the tile edge over time.
  • You're planning a bathroom or kitchen refurbishment and need tiling properly coordinated with plumbing, electrics and plastering work on site.
  • A leak has recently been repaired and the affected wall or floor now needs retiling before the room is usable again.

How the work is handled in Lewisham

  1. Step 1Inspect surfaces and tile specification
  2. Step 2Prepare walls or floors
  3. Step 3Set out, cut and install tiles
  4. Step 4Grout, seal and finish edges

Questions

Tiling Contractors questions in Lewisham

How quickly can Lian start bathroom, kitchen and floor tiling in Lewisham?

Lewisham 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 Lewisham?

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

How soon can I use a room after it's been tiled?

It depends on the adhesive and grout used, but as a general rule we'd ask that a shower isn't used for at least 24 to 48 hours after grouting and sealing, longer where a rapid-set product hasn't been used or where tanking underneath needs a full cure time first. Floors can usually take light foot traffic sooner but shouldn't have heavy furniture or appliances placed on them until the adhesive has properly gone off. We'll confirm realistic timings for your specific job rather than giving a generic figure, since cure times vary by product, temperature and ventilation.

Do you fit large format tiles, and does that need special equipment?

Yes. Large format tiles, generally anything over about 600mm, need levelling clip systems to stop lippage between adjoining tiles and keep the finished surface flat and even underfoot. They also need suction lifters to handle and place them safely without cracking, plus a fully solid bed of adhesive rather than just dabs at the corners, which takes noticeably more time to apply correctly using the right size of notched trowel. We factor all of this into timescales and pricing, since large format tiling is a slower, more careful process than laying standard ceramic tiles.

Will tiling work disrupt water supply to the rest of the property?

Usually not, unless the tiling follows plumbing work that requires the supply to be isolated, such as replacing a shower valve or bath taps before tiling around them. Where tiling is a standalone job on an existing wall or floor, water to the rest of the property stays on throughout. If a job does involve isolating supply, we'll tell you which fittings are affected and roughly how long, so the household can plan around it rather than finding out on the day.

What happens to old tiles, adhesive and rubble once they're removed?

We bag and remove tiling waste as part of the job and dispose of it through licensed waste routes, which is a legal requirement for construction waste in London rather than something that can go in a normal household bin. For larger strip-out jobs, such as a full bathroom retile, this may involve a few extra bags or a small skip depending on volume. This is factored into the quote so there's no separate disposal charge sprung on you afterwards.

Talk to Lian Construction about Lewisham

Send the site address in Lewisham, photos if available, and the tiling contractors work you need. We can review the scope and arrange the next step.

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