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HMO compliance works in Bexley

HMO compliance in Bexley, London

Lian Construction brings London rental properties up to HMO licensing standard, covering fire separation, protected escape routes, room sizes and amenity requirements. We work with landlords and letting agents across the capital on both mandatory and additional licensing schemes, surveying the property first, then pricing and scheduling the works needed to meet the conditions your local authority will check on inspection. This covers everything from a single fire door replacement to a full room-by-room reconfiguration of a converted house.

Bexley overview

HMO compliance in Bexley

South East outer London borough with suburban family housing well suited to roof replacement and property repair work. Bexley falls well within the South East London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For hmo compliance work in Bexley, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.

Bexley is a South East outer London borough made up largely of suburban family housing, the kind built up through the interwar and post-war decades as London's suburbs expanded outward. Semi-detached and detached houses with pitched, tiled roofs are the dominant type, often dating from the 1920s to 1950s, alongside pockets of later 1960s and 1970s estate housing. This mirrors the pattern found across much of outer South East London, where dense Victorian and Edwardian terraced stock gives way to more spaced-out family homes with gardens, driveways and traditional gable or hip roof designs. Roofs of this age and type are now well past their original lifespan in many cases, particularly where original tile coverings, flashing and guttering have not been replaced or properly maintained over the decades. This makes roof replacement and repair a recurring, practical need for homeowners across the borough rather than a rare event. The suburban layout, with reasonable space and access around most properties, also tends to make scaffolding and roof work more straightforward to carry out than on denser, terraced inner-London streets.

The suburban family housing that dominates Bexley means demand for roof replacement and general property repair tends to be steady and ongoing rather than driven by large development projects. Owner-occupiers make up a significant share of this type of housing, and owner-occupiers are usually the ones commissioning repair work directly, rather than managing agents overseeing large contracts. For a homeowner in Bexley, this generally means less competition from big multi-contractor developments for local tradespeople's time, though it can also mean a smaller pool of established contractors experienced with the specific mix of interwar and post-war roof types found here, compared with more built-up parts of London. Ageing roof coverings, worn flashing and guttering issues caused by general wear and London's weather are the most common triggers for enquiries in this kind of borough, rather than large-scale renovation or extension work. Homeowners weighing up roof replacement or repair in Bexley are usually best served by getting a clear, itemised quote that separates like-for-like repair from full replacement, since the age of much of the housing stock means both options are genuinely on the table depending on the condition of the existing structure and covering.

Electrics, gas and interlinked alarm systems

HMO licence conditions extend well beyond the building fabric into the property's electrical and gas installations, and these get checked alongside fire separation at both application and renewal. Councils generally expect a current Electrical Installation Condition Report showing no outstanding C1 or C2 faults, a valid annual Gas Safety Record for any gas appliances and flues, and a fire detection and alarm system that's mains-wired with battery back-up and interlinked across the whole property, typically specified to BS 5839-6 grade D LD2 or LD3 coverage depending on the layout and number of storeys. A grade D system means every alarm is powered from the mains with a tamper-proof standby battery, and LD2 coverage extends beyond just escape routes into rooms presenting the highest fire risk, usually kitchens and living rooms. We coordinate the electrical and alarm work alongside the fire separation and partition works rather than treating it as a separate visit, because running new alarm cabling between floors usually means lifting the same floorboards or opening the same ceiling voids needed for fire-stopping, and it's more efficient and less disruptive to tenants to do both in one pass through a room. Where an EICR flags an old rewirable fuse board, missing RCD protection, degraded cross-bonding or unearthed lighting circuits, which is common in properties that haven't been rewired since a 1980s or 1990s conversion, we bring in a qualified electrician to remedy those items alongside the room works rather than handing back a property with a partial fix that fails on the electrical side. Emergency lighting on escape routes is sometimes required for larger or more complex HMOs, particularly where a stairwell or corridor relies on borrowed light that's since been blocked by an internal alteration, and fire strategies for bigger properties can also call for heat detectors in kitchens rather than smoke detectors, since normal cooking activity would otherwise trigger false alarms. We flag any of this during the initial survey rather than after installation, because retrofitting battery packs, conduit or cabling into a ceiling that's already been boarded and skimmed costs considerably more than fitting it during the first pass through the property. Kitchen and bathroom extraction is another area that gets missed until an inspection picks it up. Building Regulations expect mechanical extraction ducted to external air in any kitchen and bathroom, not just an internal fan recirculating steam back into the room, and where a new kitchen or shower room is being added into an internal space with no external wall nearby, ducting it out can mean running it through a neighbouring room's void or up through a loft, which needs planning at the design stage rather than once tiling is finished. We also check portable appliance testing on any landlord-supplied white goods in shared kitchens, since PAT records are something inspecting officers can ask to see alongside the EICR and gas certificate.

What drives the cost of HMO compliance work

Pricing an HMO compliance job depends far more on how far the property is from standard than on its overall size. A property that only needs fire doors, interlinked alarms and some fire-stopping to ceiling and floor voids is a relatively contained job, and can often be costed and scheduled within a matter of weeks once survey and pricing are agreed. Where partition walls need to move to correct undersized rooms, or a bathroom or second kitchen needs to be added from scratch, costs rise quickly once plumbing, mechanical extraction, electrical first and second fix, plastering and matching the existing finish are all factored in. Structural changes add both cost and time for building control sign-off. Removing a load-bearing wall to reconfigure a floor and installing a steel beam to carry the load above, or altering a staircase to improve the escape route, both need calculations from a structural engineer and inspection at set stages, which extends the programme even where the physical work itself is quick. Older fire doors are rarely a straightforward swap: many original door openings in Victorian and Edwardian houses are undersized, out of square, or have settled over a century of movement, so fitting a certified FD30s door set often means adjusting the lining, and sometimes taking back a course or two of brickwork or building up the reveal, rather than dropping a new door into the existing frame. Access matters more than people expect. A mid-terrace property with no side access means materials, including plasterboard and fire-rated stud timber, have to go through the house, which slows the job compared with a property that has rear access or off-street parking directly outside. We also factor in whether tenants remain in situ, since working around an occupied property with notice periods and room-by-room access takes longer than a vacant one where several trades can work simultaneously. We survey the property first and price against the specific list of works the applicable licensing conditions require, rather than quoting a blanket day rate or a per-room average, because two outwardly similar terraced houses on the same street can need very different amounts of work depending on what's already been done to them, when they were last rewired, and how the loft and floor voids were left by previous alterations. Statutory costs sit alongside the building work itself and are worth budgeting for separately. A structural engineer's calculations for a steel beam, a building control application fee, and in some cases a party wall agreement with a neighbour if work touches a shared wall or foundation, can add a few hundred to a couple of thousand pounds before a single wall is opened up, depending on the scope. Scaffolding or a tower for external fire door work, cladding repairs above ground floor level, or access to a rear elevation without side access, is a further cost that's easy to overlook when comparing quotes that don't specify access equipment separately from labour and materials.

Fire separation and protected escape route works
Room size and amenity standard improvements
Suitable for licence renewals and full HMO conversions
Regular coverage of Bexley and the wider South East London area

Signs to look for

Do you need hmo compliance in Bexley?

  • Loft, understairs or ceiling voids have visible gaps where pipework or cabling passes through without proper fire-stopping.
  • Landlord has received an improvement notice or licence refusal citing specific building works needed before re-application.
  • Council has issued a licence renewal notice flagging fire doors or room sizes that no longer meet current standards.
  • Property is a converted Victorian terrace with three or more storeys sharing a single staircase and no fire-rated bedroom doors.

How the work is handled in Bexley

  1. Step 1Review borough HMO standards
  2. Step 2Survey the property against them
  3. Step 3Price and complete the required works
  4. Step 4Provide documentation for licensing

Questions

HMO compliance questions in Bexley

How quickly can Lian start hmo compliance work in Bexley?

Bexley is part of our regular South 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 Bexley?

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

What's usually the biggest compliance gap you find in existing HMOs?

Fire separation is the most common issue: missing or degraded fire doors, unsealed penetrations through ceilings and walls, and escape routes that have been compromised by later alterations. Room sizes and amenity ratios can also fall short of current standards.

How long does it take to bring a non-compliant HMO up to standard?

It depends on the scale of the shortfall. A property needing fire doors, alarms and some fire-stopping can often be turned around in a matter of weeks, while a full conversion involving new partitions and room changes takes longer.

Can this work be done while tenants remain in the property?

In many cases yes, particularly for fire doors, alarms and fire-stopping, which we can schedule room by room with notice. More disruptive works, such as major partition changes, are easier with the room temporarily vacant.

What's the minimum bedroom size for an HMO in London?

Under the national mandatory conditions, a room used as a bedroom by one person aged 10 or over needs at least 6.51 sqm, two adults sharing a room need 10.22 sqm, and a room for a single child under 10 needs at least 4.64 sqm. These are the baseline figures set out in the mandatory licensing conditions, but they're not always the final word. A number of boroughs running additional or selective licensing schemes apply their own room size standards on top of the national minimums, occasionally higher, and some also set rules around ceiling height reducing the usable floor area if a room has sloped ceilings in a loft conversion. We always check the specific scheme covering the property's borough before treating any figure as fixed, then measure the existing rooms against it and flag any that fall short before pricing partition or reconfiguration work.

Talk to Lian Construction about Bexley

Send the site address in Bexley, photos if available, and the hmo compliance work you need. We can review the scope and arrange the next step.

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