Useful after leaks, rewiring and accidental damage
Board repairs are often needed after water damage, access holes, tenant changeovers, renovation work or partition changes. We can include insulation, fire-rated board or moisture-resistant board where the room requires it, rather than automatically replacing like-for-like with standard board regardless of what the space is actually used for. Access holes cut by electricians or plumbers to run a cable or pipe are one of the most common repair requests we get, and while they're usually straightforward, getting the board properly supported and jointed matters just as much on a small access hole as it does on a larger area of damage, since an unsupported patch tends to flex, crack along the joint and need doing again within a year. Tenant changeovers bring a slightly different pattern of damage, scuffed corners, small holes from wall-mounted furniture or shelving, and marks from picture hooks or curtain poles, and landlords often bundle several of these smaller repairs into one visit between tenancies rather than dealing with each one separately as it's noticed. Partition changes, taking down a stud wall to open up a room, or building a new one to divide a space, generate their own board repair work at the junctions where the old wall met the ceiling, floor and adjoining walls, and getting those junctions properly finished is often what determines whether a converted room looks intentional or obviously altered. Skirting and coving details around a repair are worth thinking about at the same time, since a section of skirting or coving removed to carry out a board repair needs refitting or replacing to match, and leaving that as an afterthought is a common way an otherwise good repair ends up looking unfinished.