One of London's largest boroughs by population, though roofing competition here is dense — we position on trust signals rather than price alone. Croydon falls well within the South London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For external rendering and facade repair work in Croydon, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.
Croydon's size means its housing stock is genuinely mixed rather than dominated by one era. Older, more central parts of the borough have Victorian and Edwardian terraces typical of much of London, many now split into flats or extended over the years. Surrounding these are large swathes of interwar semi-detached and terraced housing from the 1920s and 1930s, the kind of suburban stock common across outer London boroughs of Croydon's scale. There's also a substantial amount of post-war housing, including local authority estates and low-rise blocks built to meet demand from a growing population, plus more recent flat developments in and around the town centre. For a contractor, this variety matters: a Victorian terrace roof, a 1930s semi with a hip roof, and a 1960s block each bring different materials, access issues and repair histories. Roofs and general fabric across this older stock are now reaching an age where repair or replacement is a genuine issue for a large number of homeowners at once, rather than a scattered minority, which is one reason demand across the borough tends to be steady.
A borough with one of London's largest populations means a correspondingly large number of homes needing ongoing repair and refurbishment, and Croydon has no shortage of roofing and building firms competing for that work. That density is good for choice but it also makes the market harder for homeowners to read: adverts and cold callers on price alone are common, and it's not always obvious which quotes reflect proper materials and workmanship and which are cutting corners to win the job cheaply. In a market like this, we'd rather compete on being clear about what's included, showing evidence of past work, and standing behind what we do, than get drawn into a race to the bottom on quoted price. For homeowners and landlords, the practical takeaway is to treat unusually low quotes with some caution and to ask what's actually covered before agreeing anything. Landlords in particular, often managing several properties across the borough, tend to value a contractor who turns up when promised and communicates clearly over one who was marginally cheaper on paper. That reliability gap is often where the real competition sits, even if it's not what's advertised.
Render and External Wall Insulation (EWI)
External Wall Insulation systems, increasingly common on solid-wall Victorian and ex-council properties looking to improve thermal performance, change how the render on a wall needs to be specified and detailed. EWI involves fixing rigid insulation boards to the outside of the wall, then applying a reinforced base coat with mesh embedded into it, followed by a top coat, usually a silicone or acrylic render, rather than rendering directly onto brick. Where we're asked to re-render a wall that already has EWI installed, or to repair render that's failed on an EWI system, the detailing at openings matters more than on a solid masonry wall, since window and door reveals, meter boxes and pipe penetrations all need the insulation and render built up correctly around them to avoid a thermal bridge or a point where water can track behind the system. Reveal depth changes too, since adding insulation and render to an external wall typically adds 80 to 150mm of thickness depending on the insulation used, which affects how windows, door thresholds, cills and rainwater goods need to be extended or re-detailed to sit properly against the new wall face. We don't design or specify EWI insulation systems as a standalone service, but where render work is needed on a wall with EWI already fitted, or as part of a wider EWI installation being coordinated by others, we work to the system manufacturer's detailing requirements so the render performs and weathers as the system was designed to.
Conservation areas and planning considerations for render
Render is often the single biggest visual element of a street-facing elevation, which is exactly why conservation areas and Article 4 directions frequently place restrictions on changing it. In many conservation areas, painting over previously unpainted render, or changing the render colour on the principal elevation, from a natural sand and cement finish to a bright modern colour for example, can require planning permission even though the same change would be permitted development on an unlisted property outside a conservation area. Some councils also restrict changing render texture or replacing traditional lime or sand and cement render with a modern silicone or monocouche system on street-facing elevations, since the visual character of a terrace often depends on a consistent render finish across neighbouring properties. Listed buildings carry stricter controls again, and render specification on a listed property, including colour, texture and material, is very likely to need listed building consent regardless of how minor the change looks in practice. On a terrace of uniformly rendered Victorian or Edwardian houses, render finish and colour often forms part of what gives the street its character as a whole, which is one of the main reasons conservation area controls focus on it specifically rather than on less visible changes. Where several neighbouring properties have already changed their render finish or colour without consent, that doesn't necessarily set a precedent that makes a similar change acceptable for your property, since councils can and do take enforcement action retrospectively, so it's worth checking the current position for your specific address rather than assuming what's already been done nearby is a reliable guide. We flag at survey stage where a property's location is likely to bring render work into scope for planning or listed building consent, but confirming the position and making any application is a separate process handled by the property owner, or an architect or planning consultant working on their behalf, rather than something we apply for on the client's part.