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Fire door installation in Enfield

Fire door installation in Enfield, London

Lian Construction supplies and installs FD30 and FD60 fire doors across London for landlords, letting agents and block managers, fitted to the gap tolerances, seals and closer settings that make a certified fire door actually work as tested. We handle single door replacements for individual flats and full programmes across blocks and HMO portfolios, working around occupied properties and reporting back with photographic evidence for fire safety files and licensing inspections.

Enfield overview

Fire door installation in Enfield

Outer North London borough with a strong stock of Edwardian and interwar houses suited to full refurbishment work. Enfield falls well within the North London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For fire door installation work in Enfield, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.

Enfield's housing is dominated by Edwardian (roughly 1901 to 1910) and interwar (1920s to 1930s) houses, mostly semi-detached and terraced, built as London's suburbs expanded along the tram and rail lines north of the city. These are solid brick houses with bay windows, front and rear gardens, and a hallway layout rather than the open-plan arrangement of newer builds. Many still have their original room divisions, meaning a single narrow kitchen and separate reception rooms, which is why side-return and rear extensions are a common ask when owners want a more modern living space. Roof pitches on both Edwardian and interwar houses tend to suit loft conversions reasonably well, another frequent job in this type of stock. Because the houses are 90 to 120 years old, refurbishment work often surfaces older wiring, ageing plumbing, and dated damp-proofing that need addressing alongside cosmetic updates. This combination of period character and outdated services is exactly what makes this housing stock well suited to full refurbishment rather than piecemeal repair.

As Edwardian and interwar houses in Enfield reach the point where original services and layouts no longer suit modern living, demand for full refurbishment work naturally increases. Many owner-occupiers who bought years ago are now choosing to extend and modernise in place rather than move, given the cost and disruption of relocating within London. Landlords with older rental stock face similar pressure, since tenants increasingly expect updated kitchens, bathrooms, and heating systems, and letting standards have tightened over time. For a homeowner in this position, the practical implication is that a refurbishment project in Enfield is rarely just cosmetic. It usually involves coordinating structural work, such as a rear extension or loft conversion, with less visible but equally necessary jobs like rewiring or replacing old boilers and pipework. Finding a contractor who can manage that combination of period-property knowledge and general building work, rather than one who only handles single trades, tends to matter more here than in areas with newer housing. It is worth asking any contractor about their experience specifically with Edwardian and interwar properties before committing to a project.

Given the age of much of Enfield's housing, planning considerations are worth checking early. Some Edwardian and interwar streets in outer London boroughs fall within conservation areas, which can affect what you're allowed to change on the front elevation, roofline, or boundary treatments, even where the works themselves would otherwise be permitted development. It's also worth checking whether an Article 4 direction applies locally, as this can remove some of the usual permitted development rights for extensions or loft conversions. Semi-detached houses of this era typically share a party wall, so party wall agreements with neighbours are often needed for extensions or loft work. None of this should be assumed either way. We'd always recommend checking with Enfield Council's planning department, or having your contractor do so, before finalising design plans, since requirements can vary street by street even within the same borough.

Preparing the property and tenants before fitting starts

A fire door installation is disruptive in a way a lot of other work isn't, because the door has to come off its hinges and the opening is without a door, sometimes for several hours, while the new set is hung, gauged and sealed. For occupied flats and HMOs we agree a schedule with the landlord or managing agent first, and the tenancy agreement's access notice period, usually 24 to 48 hours, needs to be honoured before we turn up. Rooms being worked on need to be cleared of anything blocking the frame, and furniture pushed back from the opening so there's room to manoeuvre a doorset that can weigh 40kg or more. Floor coverings either side of the threshold get dust sheeted, since cutting and fitting generates debris and occasionally some dust from packing or planing an out-of-square frame. Where a bedroom or bathroom door is being replaced, we sequence the work so the room isn't left without any door, and therefore without privacy or security, for longer than necessary, usually fitting the new leaf the same day the old one comes off rather than leaving an opening overnight. On communal or entrance doors we also confirm who holds spare keys, since a new doorset usually needs new keeps and sometimes a new lock cylinder to match the certified ironmongery.

Keeping a fire door compliant after it's fitted

A certified doorset only keeps working as tested if it's looked after in a fairly specific way. Self-closers loosen with use and need the closing speed and latching force checked periodically, particularly on heavier FD60 leaves, since a closer set too weak won't pull the door fully onto the latch and a closer set too aggressive can slam and damage the frame over time. The most common thing we see undo a good installation is redecoration: painters covering the intumescent strip or cold smoke seal in the door edge groove with gloss or masonry paint, which stops the seal expanding correctly if it's ever needed, and painting over the certification label on the top edge, which then can't be checked at inspection. We'd always flag to a landlord or contractor that seals and labels need masking off rather than painted over. Hinges benefit from an occasional check that screws haven't worked loose in the timber, especially on doors that get heavy daily use, and any vision panel glazing or letterplate should be checked that its intumescent lining hasn't been disturbed. None of this is complicated, but it does mean fire doors aren't quite a fit-and-forget item in the way a standard internal door is.

FD30 and FD60 certified doorsets
Intumescent strips, cold smoke seals and self-closers fitted correctly
Fire door surveys for HMOs and blocks
Regular coverage of Enfield and the wider North London area

Signs to look for

Do you need fire door installation in Enfield?

  • Intumescent or smoke seals are missing, painted over, or coming loose from their grooves in the door or frame edge.
  • The self-closing device has been unscrewed, disconnected, or the door is regularly propped open with a wedge or fire extinguisher.
  • An HMO licence renewal or council inspection is due and the current doors carry no visible certification label or test paperwork.
  • A recent fire risk assessment listed fire doors as an action point or rated them unsatisfactory for the building.

How the work is handled in Enfield

  1. Step 1Confirm the required door schedule
  2. Step 2Supply certified doorsets
  3. Step 3Install to correct tolerances
  4. Step 4Gauge, photograph and sign off each door

Questions

Fire door installation questions in Enfield

How quickly can Lian start fire door installation work in Enfield?

Enfield is part of our regular North 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 Enfield?

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

Is the landlord or the leaseholder responsible for fire doors in a block of flats?

Responsibility for common parts, including doors onto shared escape routes, usually sits with the freeholder or managing agent as the responsible person under fire safety legislation. A flat's own entrance door is often the leaseholder's responsibility to maintain under the lease, though the responsible person still has a duty to check it's adequate as part of the building's fire risk assessment. In practice we're instructed both ways, by managing agents replacing communal doors across a whole block, and by individual leaseholders replacing their own front door because a survey or fire risk assessment flagged it, or simply because it's due for renewal.

Can you fit a fire doorset into an out-of-square Victorian opening?

Yes, and it's a routine part of the job in London's older conversions. We survey the opening first to check its size, squareness and depth, then either order a doorset sized to suit or adjust the frame and packing so the certified door still closes onto the correct gap tolerance all the way round. The packing and fixing has to follow the manufacturer's fitting instructions for that doorset rather than being cut freehand, because the certification only holds if the door is installed the way it was tested. Where an opening is significantly out of standard sizes, a bespoke doorset is ordered rather than forcing a standard one to fit.

What paperwork should we get once fire doors have been fitted?

You should end up with a clear paper trail: the doorset manufacturer's test or assessment evidence for that specific configuration, and a fitting record confirming who installed each door, when, and that gaps, seals and the closer were checked and signed off. On block and portfolio jobs we also provide a photographic record of each door as fitted, which is useful evidence to sit in the responsible person's fire safety file and to show at licensing inspections or when a fire risk assessor asks for it. Keeping this with the building's other fire safety records, rather than with whoever project-managed the works, means it's still there years later.

Can you fit glazed vision panels, letterplates or door numerals into a fire door without affecting its rating?

Yes, but only using components that fall within the doorset's tested scope. Vision panels use fire-rated glass, either Georgian wired or a clear pyrolytic type, set in matching intumescent beading rather than standard bead. Letterplates, door numerals and spy holes are fitted with fire-rated liners or intumescent sleeves so the seal around the cut-out is maintained. Adding ironmongery that wasn't part of the tested assembly, even something as simple as the wrong hinge, can technically invalidate the door's certification, so we specify and source components to match what the doorset manufacturer allows rather than using whatever's convenient.

Talk to Lian Construction about Enfield

Send the site address in Enfield, photos if available, and the fire door installation work you need. We can review the scope and arrange the next step.

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