148 Checkatrade listings but a fragmented market with no dominant brand — heavy Article 4 planning activity and steady gentrification-driven refurbishment demand. Hackney falls well within the East London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For brickwork and repointing work in Hackney, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.
Hackney's housing stock is dominated by Victorian and Edwardian terraces, many split into flats, alongside a good number of converted warehouses and ex-industrial buildings from the borough's manufacturing past. There's also a substantial amount of post-war council housing, ranging from low-rise blocks to larger estates, sitting close to streets of period terraces. This mix means the borough has a wide spread of jobs for contractors, from internal reconfiguration of Victorian conversions to communal repairs on estate blocks. Given the heavy Article 4 planning activity referenced locally, a meaningful share of this stock sits within conservation areas, where the usual Victorian and Edwardian terrace features (sash windows, slate roofs, original brick facades, decorative frontages) are more tightly protected than elsewhere in London. As with much of inner London, solid wall construction is common, which has implications for insulation and damp work. Property owners taking on refurbishment in Hackney are often dealing with buildings that have already been altered more than once, so matching existing detailing and working around previous non-standard interventions is a regular part of the job here.
Hackney shows a high volume of construction activity on Checkatrade (148 listings) but no single contractor or brand has established a clear lead, which makes the market fragmented. For homeowners and landlords, this generally means more choice but also more variability in quality and pricing, so getting quotes from a few established firms and checking references carefully is worth the extra time. The borough's heavy Article 4 planning activity adds another layer: permitted development rights are withdrawn in many areas, so alterations that would be straightforward elsewhere often need a full planning application first. This tends to lengthen project timelines and makes it more important to work with a contractor who understands local planning requirements rather than just the build itself. On top of that, steady gentrification-driven refurbishment demand means many properties are being upgraded to modern standards, from kitchen and bathroom renovations to loft conversions and full internal refits, often as part of a wider push to bring older housing stock up to current expectations. Landlords in particular are likely refurbishing between tenancies or ahead of resale, so demand for reliable, planning-aware contractors in Hackney tends to stay consistent rather than seasonal.
Given the level of Article 4 planning activity in Hackney, many homeowners will find that permitted development rights, which normally allow smaller works like some rear extensions, roof alterations or replacement windows without planning permission, have been removed in their area. This means a full planning application is often required even for changes that would be minor elsewhere in London. If your property sits within a conservation area, expect additional scrutiny on materials and appearance, particularly for anything visible from the street, such as windows, doors, roofing materials and front boundary treatments. It's worth checking your property's specific Article 4 status and conservation area designation with the council before finalising any design, since this affects both timeline and what materials or approaches are realistically achievable.
Structural brickwork repairs and when an engineer is needed
Not every crack in a brick wall is structural, and distinguishing a cosmetic or thermal movement crack from one that indicates genuine structural movement is the first step before any repair is priced. A crack that follows a stepped pattern along mortar joints, is wider than a few millimetres, or is actively widening over time, particularly if it's linked to nearby tree activity, clay soil movement or previous underpinning work, needs a structural engineer's assessment before repair work starts, since filling or repointing over a wall that's still moving is only ever a temporary fix that will crack again. We carry out the remedial brickwork itself, rebuilding a section of wall, installing helical wall ties or crack stitching bars where specified, and repointing or rebuilding around a repaired area, but we work from a structural engineer's specification for the actual diagnosis and calculations, since assessing whether movement is historic and stable or ongoing and worsening is a job for someone qualified to make that call, not something we determine ourselves. In the period before an engineer's assessment, it's worth keeping a simple visual record of any crack rather than waiting and hoping it stabilises on its own. A pencil line or a small piece of tape placed across the crack, dated, shows clearly over the following weeks or months whether it's still moving, which is useful information for an engineer to have when they do assess it, and it also gives you an early, low-cost indication of whether the situation is worsening before committing to a full survey. Where a client already has an engineer's report or is dealing with a subsidence claim through their buildings insurer, we're happy to work from that report directly and price the brickwork element of the recommended repair. Where movement looks structural but hasn't yet been assessed, we'll say so plainly and recommend getting an engineer involved before committing to repair work, rather than repointing over a crack that's likely to reopen within a year or two once the underlying movement continues.
Chimney stacks, garden walls and brick cleaning
Chimney stacks take the worst weather exposure of almost any brickwork on a London house, standing above the roofline with no protection and full exposure to wind-driven rain, and they're frequently the first place repointing failure and brick spalling show up. We repoint and repair stack brickwork, renew flaunching, the mortar fillet around the base of the chimney pots that sheds water away from the stack top, and rebuild sections where brick has deteriorated too far to repair in place, coordinating scaffold access with any roofing work happening at the same time where relevant. Garden and boundary walls are built to the same standard as house brickwork but usually weather faster, since they have no roof overhang for protection and often sit closer to ground moisture and vegetation than a house elevation does, and a garden wall showing bulging or leaning, rather than just failed pointing, needs assessing for its footing condition before any repointing is worthwhile. Brick cleaning removes paint, staining, algae or general dirt from a facade, and method matters as much as the result: soft-washing with a low-pressure water and appropriate cleaning solution lifts dirt and biological growth without damaging the brick face, while sandblasting or aggressive high-pressure cleaning strips away the harder, weathered outer surface of an older brick permanently, leaving it more porous and vulnerable to future frost damage. We avoid sandblasting on historic brickwork for this reason and would flag it as a risk to the fabric of the building rather than recommend it, even where it looks like the faster option.