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Fire safety compliance in Bromley

Fire safety compliance in Bromley, London

Lian Construction carries out fire safety compliance works for London landlords, letting agents and block managers, turning fire risk assessment action plans into completed, documented works. Rather than leaving you to source separate contractors for fire doors, fire-stopping, emergency lighting and alarm work, we price the whole action plan as one job and deliver it as a coordinated programme. Each completed item is photographed against the corresponding entry in the assessment, giving you a clear record for the assessor, freeholder or fire authority.

Bromley overview

Fire safety compliance in Bromley

South East London's largest borough by area, with established period housing and demand for roof replacement and general repairs. Bromley falls well within the South East London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For fire safety compliance work in Bromley, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.

Bromley is South East London's largest borough by area, and that scale shows in the range of period housing across it. Expect a good deal of Victorian and Edwardian terraced and semi-detached houses in the more established residential pockets, alongside a substantial stock of 1920s and 1930s suburban semis, which is typical of outer London boroughs that grew up around expanding rail links in that era. There are also pockets of larger interwar and postwar detached houses, plus some later 20th-century infill and estate development filling in the gaps between older neighbourhoods. Roofs, chimneys, brickwork and rainwater goods on this older stock are now well past their original design life in many cases, which is a big part of why roof replacement and general repair work is in steady demand across the borough. Because Bromley covers such a wide area, the age and condition of housing can vary a lot street to street, so it is worth getting a property looked at individually rather than assuming what worked next door applies to your own roof or structure.

Given how much ground Bromley covers as London's largest borough, demand for roofing and general repair work is spread thinly across a wide area rather than concentrated in one or two hotspots. That has practical implications for homeowners: it can be harder to find a contractor who is genuinely local to your specific part of the borough and willing to travel efficiently, and lead times can stretch out during busy periods simply because tradespeople are covering more ground between jobs. With so much established period housing, a lot of the work coming through is reactive, roof repairs after storm damage, ongoing maintenance on ageing chimneys and guttering, and general fabric repairs on houses that were not built with modern weatherproofing standards in mind. For homeowners and landlords, this usually means being proactive pays off: getting a roof or exterior condition checked before a leak forces an emergency call tends to be cheaper and less disruptive. It is also worth asking any contractor how familiar they are with the specific area of Bromley you are in, since access, parking and the age profile of housing can differ quite a bit across such a large borough.

Given the amount of established period housing across Bromley, it is worth checking early whether a property sits within a conservation area, as is the case in parts of many outer London boroughs with older housing stock. This can affect what is permitted for roof coverings, chimney alterations, and visible external repairs, sometimes requiring like-for-like materials or additional consent even for straightforward repair work. Not every period property will be affected, and many repairs fall under permitted development, but it is not something to assume either way. If a property is listed or in a conservation area, it is sensible to confirm requirements with the local planning authority before work starts, since retrospective consent issues can cause delays and added cost. A contractor experienced with older properties should be able to flag likely restrictions early, but the homeowner remains responsible for confirming planning status.

Coordinating works around London's older housing stock

Fire safety works in London most often land on buildings that weren't designed with modern compartmentation in mind: Victorian terraces split into flats, ex-council low and high-rise blocks, and mansion blocks converted decades ago. Lath and plaster ceilings frequently hide voids that run the full width of a house, so a service penetration in one flat can open a path for fire and smoke into the flat above with no visible sign at ceiling level. Rewiring, replumbing or a loft conversion carried out years ago, often before current regulations, has typically cut through party walls or floor structures without anyone reinstating the fire line afterwards. Floor-to-ceiling heights in these buildings vary by several centimetres between rooms on the same storey, which affects standard door set sizing and sometimes means a door has to be made to measure rather than bought off the shelf. In conservation areas, external escape stairs or fire-rated rooflights can be subject to planning constraints, so we check early whether an item on the action plan needs consent before it's programmed in. On leasehold blocks, works to communal areas usually need sign-off from the freeholder or managing agent even where a leaseholder raised the issue, so we're used to working to that approval chain rather than treating it as a delay.

What happens during the site survey

Before pricing the action plan, we visit the building to check what's actually involved in each item rather than quoting from the FRA text alone. That means measuring door openings against standard FD30 door set sizes, checking riser cupboards and loft hatches for access, and looking at how a service penetration is boxed in before deciding whether it can be fire-stopped through an access panel or needs plasterboard opened up. For buildings built or altered before 2000, we ask whether an asbestos register exists, since opening ceiling voids or riser boxing without one can hold up the whole programme once work starts. We also flag anything the assessor may not have been able to see, a locked cupboard, a loft space without a hatch, or a door that's been re-hung since the FRA was written, and note it separately from the original action plan. Having someone available on the day who can open communal areas, plant rooms and any locked flats speeds the survey up considerably; where that's not possible we schedule a second visit rather than guess at what's behind a locked door. The survey is what the itemised quote is built from, so gaps in access at this stage tend to show up as revised pricing later.

Fire risk assessment action plans delivered end to end
Compartmentation and fire-stopping works
Suitable for occupied HMOs and rented blocks
Regular coverage of Bromley and the wider South East London area

Signs to look for

Do you need fire safety compliance in Bromley?

  • Cables, pipes or waste stacks pass through a ceiling or wall with no fire-rated collar or sealant around them.
  • The most recent fire risk assessment lists actions still marked outstanding months after the review date given.
  • Emergency lighting in the stairwell or corridor doesn't come on when you test it by cutting the power.
  • A riser cupboard door is missing, damaged or propped open, exposing service pipework that should sit behind a fire-rated enclosure.

How the work is handled in Bromley

  1. Step 1Review the FRA action plan
  2. Step 2Price each action item clearly
  3. Step 3Carry out the remedial works
  4. Step 4Document and photograph completed items

Questions

Fire safety compliance questions in Bromley

How quickly can Lian start fire safety compliance work in Bromley?

Bromley 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 Bromley?

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

How much does a typical fire safety compliance programme cost?

It varies a lot with the size of the FRA action plan, the number of fire doors involved and whether scaffold or extensive fire-stopping to service risers is needed. A short list of six or seven items in a converted Victorian house might run to a few thousand pounds, while a full communal upgrade across a block of flats, with door sets, compartmentation and emergency lighting, costs considerably more. We price the action plan line by line so you can see what each item costs before deciding whether to proceed with all of it at once or stage the works over a few visits.

Do we need building control sign-off for this kind of work?

Some items, such as replacing fire doors or altering compartment walls, fall under Part B of the Building Regulations, and whether building control needs to be involved depends on the scope and whether the work is notifiable. We can flag where an item is likely to need building control or a competent person scheme certificate and factor that into the programme, though confirming which works are notifiable ultimately depends on the specific building and falls to the client or their agent to establish.

What happens if the managing agent or freeholder raises an issue that wasn't in the original FRA?

This comes up fairly often, particularly on older buildings where an assessor couldn't access every area. If something is flagged after our survey, such as a riser cupboard or loft space that was locked at the time of the FRA, we price it as an addition to the works and note that it falls outside the original assessment, so there's a clear paper trail showing what was in the assessor's report and what was added afterwards by agreement.

Can you handle emergency lighting and fire alarm work, or only the building fabric side?

We coordinate electrical elements such as emergency lighting and fire alarm installation or repair through electricians working as part of the overall programme, so a block doesn't end up with separate contractors on separate visits for what is really one job. The electrical testing and certification is carried out and issued by a qualified electrician, and we make sure it's collected alongside the rest of the photographic and documentary evidence for the completed action plan.

Talk to Lian Construction about Bromley

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

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