A large stock of Victorian and Edwardian houses with essentially no dedicated roofing competitor coverage. Greenwich falls well within the South East London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For fabric-first eco retrofit and solid wall insulation for Victorian and Edwardian terraces in Greenwich, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.
Greenwich has a large stock of Victorian and Edwardian houses, much of it terraced or semi-detached, built in the decades either side of 1900 as London's suburbs expanded along the riverside and rail lines. As with similar housing across inner and near-inner London boroughs, roofs on these properties are typically slate or clay tile, often with parapet walls, valley gutters, and multiple original chimney stacks. Many houses will have had partial re-roofing, loft conversions, or rear extensions at some point over the past century, which means roof coverings and detailing are frequently mixed ages even on a single property. Bay windows with their own small roofs, and shared or party-wall guttering between terraced neighbours, are common features that need particular care during repair work. Given the age of this housing stock, issues such as slipped or missing tiles, ageing lead flashing around chimneys, and worn valley gutters are the kind of thing homeowners in Greenwich are likely to encounter periodically, rather than one-off problems. Property condition varies a good deal street by street depending on maintenance history, so what one house needs can differ significantly from its neighbour.
With a large stock of Victorian and Edwardian houses and essentially no dedicated roofing competitor coverage in the area, homeowners and landlords in Greenwich are often left choosing between general builders who treat roofing as a sideline, or firms based further afield who may not prioritise smaller local jobs. This gap tends to show up most clearly with urgent repairs, where a slipped tile or a leak after a storm needs someone who can attend quickly rather than fit the job in around larger contracts elsewhere. It also affects planning and quoting for larger work such as full re-roofs or chimney repairs, where a lack of specialist local knowledge can mean longer lead times or less accurate initial assessments. For landlords managing older rental stock, this matters because roof issues left unresolved tend to escalate into damp and interior damage, which is more disruptive and costly to fix than catching problems early. Homeowners undertaking wider refurbishment work, such as loft conversions or extensions, may also find it harder to coordinate roofing specifically as part of a bigger project if there isn't a contractor locally who covers that trade in depth. In practice, this means demand for reliable, responsive roofing and refurbishment work in Greenwich likely outstrips the readily available supply.
Given the concentration of Victorian and Edwardian houses in Greenwich, conservation area and, in some cases, listed building considerations are worth checking before starting roofing or exterior refurbishment work. As in many outer and inner London boroughs with older housing stock, parts of Greenwich may fall within conservation areas, where changes visible from the street, such as replacing roof coverings with a different material, altering rooflines, or adding roof windows to a front elevation, can require planning permission even where similar work elsewhere would be permitted development. Chimney stacks and original architectural detailing are often specifically protected in these areas. It's worth checking with the local planning department or a surveyor early on, since retrospective permission is harder to secure than getting it sorted before work starts. This doesn't apply to every property, and plenty of routine repairs and like-for-like replacements fall outside these controls, but it's a sensible thing to verify given the age of the housing stock.
How Long Each Stage of a Retrofit Takes
A loft top-up alone is typically a one or two day job. Suspended floor insulation to a typical terrace ground floor, lifting boards, fitting insulation between joists and refitting, usually takes three to five days once furniture and floor coverings are cleared, more if rotten boards turn up once they're lifted. Internal wall insulation to a full ground-and-first-floor house, including removing and refitting radiators, skirting and finishing plaster, realistically runs two to three weeks room by room, partly because a plaster skim coat needs roughly a day of drying time per millimetre of thickness before it can be decorated, so a 2-3mm finish coat wants the best part of a week to dry out properly before paint goes on. External wall insulation on a mid-terrace typically takes two to three weeks from scaffold going up to render curing, weather permitting, since most render systems need settled, dry conditions above about 5°C to cure properly and can't be rushed in wet or frosty weeks; a semi-detached with more elevations to cover runs longer. Where several measures are combined into one retrofit - loft, floor, internal wall insulation to a couple of rooms and secondary glazing, say - the programme is usually six to ten weeks once planning consents, where needed, and Party Wall Act notice periods are factored in, because those notice periods run in parallel with survey and specification work rather than adding pure delay if planned properly from the start. These are typical durations based on how we sequence and resource this work; ground conditions, weather, and what turns up once floorboards or old render come off can move any of them in either direction. Where the retrofit is bundled with a wider refurbishment, the fabric measures get sequenced into that programme rather than run as a separate job afterward, which is usually faster overall.
Building Regulations, Planning and Party Wall Consents
Any wall, roof or floor insulation upgrade sits under Building Regulations Approved Document L (Conservation of Fuel and Power), which sets the energy performance standard the finished work has to meet for existing dwellings - broadly the 0.30 W/m²K wall, 0.16 W/m²K roof and 0.25 W/m²K floor backstop U-values referred to earlier - and Approved Document F (Ventilation) runs alongside it because reducing air leakage without providing controlled ventilation - trickle vents, extract fans or whole-house ventilation - is a recognised cause of condensation and mould. External wall insulation is normally permitted development, provided the finish matches the existing exterior in appearance, but this right is commonly removed or restricted in conservation areas and on listed buildings, which cover large parts of London's Victorian and Edwardian terraced streets, so a planning application is often needed before external insulation or render changes can go ahead - we check your specific address against the local planning authority's conservation area map and any Article 4 direction before recommending a route, and where the permitted development position is genuinely unclear, applying for a Certificate of Lawfulness (a formal council determination, typically an eight-week process) can settle the point before scaffolding is booked rather than after. A party wall notice for external wall insulation is required wherever the render or fixings will sit over or against a wall shared with a neighbouring terrace or semi, under the Party Wall etc. Act 1996, and adjoining owners need one to two months' notice before scaffolding or fixings go up - alongside the notice, we'd recommend a written schedule of condition with dated photographs of the shared wall, so there's a clear record of its state before and after the work if a dispute ever arises. Skipping the notice altogether is a genuinely common and avoidable cause of disputes on terraced insulation jobs. For anything structural bundled into the retrofit, chimney breast removal or an enlarged opening, a structural engineer's calculations and a full plans Building Control submission are needed rather than the simpler building notice route used for straightforward fabric-only upgrades.