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Period Plasterwork & Heritage Restoration in Hammersmith and Fulham

Cornice & Period Moulding Restoration in Hammersmith and Fulham, London

Cracked, missing or painted-over cornice and ceiling roses are a routine finding in London's Victorian and Edwardian terraces. Lian Construction matches and reinstates period plasterwork in fibrous plaster or run-in-situ solid plaster, diagnosing the cause, usually a leak or structural movement, before any moulding is refixed.

Hammersmith and Fulham overview

Cornice & Period Moulding Restoration in Hammersmith and Fulham

West London borough with high-value period conversions where quality finishing work — tiling, plastering, decorating — matters most. Hammersmith and Fulham falls well within the West London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For cornice, ceiling rose and period moulding restoration for Victorian and Edwardian terraces in Hammersmith and Fulham, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.

Hammersmith and Fulham's housing stock is dominated by the kind of period property found across much of inner and West London: Victorian and Edwardian terraces and villas, many of which have been split into flats over the decades, alongside mansion blocks and some purpose-built conversions from the early to mid-20th century. A significant share of the borough's homes are conversions rather than single-family houses, which is typical of high-value West London areas where large period houses have been reworked into two, three or more flats to meet demand. This conversion history means a lot of the existing stock carries older wall and floor build-ups, original plasterwork in varying condition, and layouts that have been altered more than once. As with other West London boroughs, there's also a mix of ex-local authority blocks and post-war infill alongside the period stock. Because so much of the housing is period conversion rather than new-build, quality of finish tends to matter more here than in areas with a higher proportion of modern construction, since old walls, ceilings and floors need careful preparation before tiling, plastering or decorating will look right and last.

In a borough where so much of the property is high-value period conversion, the finishing trades carry more weight than they might elsewhere. A flat carved out of a Victorian terrace lives or dies on how well the plaster, tiling and decorating are done, since buyers and tenants at this end of the market notice uneven walls, poor tile lines or rough paintwork more readily than they would in a standard new-build. That creates steady demand for contractors who can do finishing work properly rather than just quickly, particularly on bathroom and kitchen refits where tiling quality is hard to hide. It also means homeowners and landlords doing up a conversion flat are often better served focusing budget on getting the finishing right rather than cutting corners to save on the last stage of a project. For landlords specifically, a well-finished conversion tends to let faster and at a better rent in this kind of market, so the extra cost of proper plastering and tiling work is usually recovered over time. Given the age and variability of the underlying building fabric, it's also worth budgeting some contingency for making good old walls and floors before the visible finishing work even starts.

Given how much of Hammersmith and Fulham's housing stock is period conversion, it's worth being aware that conservation area and listed building rules are common across this type of West London property, as they are in many inner London boroughs. Converting or altering a period house can trigger planning or listed building consent requirements depending on the specific property and area, particularly for external changes, window replacements or work affecting original features. Internal finishing work like plastering, tiling and decorating is generally more straightforward from a planning perspective, but if it's part of a wider conversion or alteration project it's sensible to check the property's status with the council before starting. As with any older building, it's also worth confirming what internal fabric might be original or protected before stripping back walls, since this can affect both the approach and the cost of the finishing work.

Typical cornice & period moulding restoration prices in London
ItemTypical range
Crack repair / re-fixing loose cornice£80–£300
New cornice, matched profile, per linear metre£45–£120
Full room cornice reinstatement£600–£1,200
Bespoke ceiling rose (new mould)£600–£900

General London market guidance, not a fixed quote — actual pricing depends on a site survey. Full breakdown: cost guide.

Shared, Leasehold And Freeholder Complications

A large proportion of London's Victorian and Edwardian terraces have been converted into two or more flats, and this changes who's responsible for cornice damage and who needs to agree to its repair. Where the damaged cornice sits in a communal hallway or stairwell, it's typically the freeholder's or management company's responsibility, and the cost is usually recovered through the service charge rather than an individual leaseholder's pocket, so check the lease and speak to the managing agent before commissioning work yourself. Where damage originates from a leak in the flat above, a shared roof, or a communal downpipe, working out whose buildings insurance covers the repair, the affected leaseholder's policy, the freeholder's block policy, or the party responsible for the leak's source, can take longer to resolve than the plastering work itself, and it's worth getting that agreed before work starts rather than after. Lease covenants in converted period properties sometimes specifically restrict alterations to original internal features, cornice and ceiling roses included, even within a single flat's demise, which is separate from any conservation area or listed building question and worth checking directly against your lease. Where the cornice sits along a party wall line, for example following an earlier chimney breast removal, and repair genuinely requires cutting into the party structure itself, the Party Wall etc. Act 1996 may apply, though this is uncommon for straightforward cornice reinstatement work.

Sequencing: Why The Order Of Operations Matters

Cornice and ceiling rose work should almost always be the second-to-last trade on site, not the first. If there's any suspicion the damage originated from a leak, that leak needs to be found and fixed first (see our <a href='/leak-repairs-london'>leak repair</a> page), and the affected ceiling and wall structure given time to dry out fully, this can take anywhere from a few days to several weeks depending on how saturated the plaster and timber have become, before any new cornice is bonded to it. Skipping this step and re-fixing decorative plasterwork straight onto a still-damp ceiling is the single most common reason cornice repairs fail again within a year or two. Once the substrate is confirmed dry and stable, ceiling and wall skimming or plasterboard repair happens next, followed by the cornice and rose reinstatement itself, then filling and sanding of joints, and only then priming and final decoration. Redecoration is deliberately last: painting over a cornice repair before the plaster has fully cured traps moisture behind the paint film and causes the finish to blister or discolour within months. Getting this order right is largely why we coordinate the ceiling repair, the moulding reinstatement, and the redecoration as one sequenced job rather than three homeowner-managed handoffs between separate contractors.

We diagnose why a cornice has cracked, sagged or lost detail, damp ceiling above, structural movement, or decades of paint, before quoting a fix, because bonding new plaster onto a ceiling that's still drying from a leak is how the same crack reappears eighteen months later.
New cornice sections are run or cast from a profile match of your existing moulding, not fitted from a generic 90mm DIY coving kit that will look wrong next to Victorian or Edwardian detail.
We work in both fibrous plaster, cast off-site in a workshop mould, and run-in-situ solid plaster, and recommend whichever method actually suits your ceiling height, access and the complexity of the profile.
Regular coverage of Hammersmith and Fulham and the wider West London area

Signs to look for

Do you need cornice & period moulding restoration in Hammersmith and Fulham?

  • A section of cornice sagging or pulling away from the ceiling, sometimes with a visible gap or shadow line you can see daylight through.
  • A ceiling rose whose leaf or acanthus detail has become a soft, shapeless blob after repeated coats of gloss paint over the decades.
  • Cornice crudely patched with caulk, mastic or expanding foam, visible as a different texture or sheen to the surrounding original plaster.
  • A section of cornice missing entirely, commonly where a chimney breast has been removed or a wall taken down, leaving an unfinished gap.

How the work is handled in Hammersmith and Fulham

  1. Step 1Site visit to inspect the damage and identify the likely cause: leak, structural movement, age, or a previous poor repair.
  2. Step 2Check the ceiling substrate and any recent leak history in the affected area before committing to a repair method.
  3. Step 3Confirm the property's listed building or conservation area status and flag any consent genuinely needed.
  4. Step 4Take a profile template or cast of the existing cornice or rose to match the pattern exactly, rather than approximate it.
  5. Step 5Decide between fibrous plaster (workshop-cast) and run-in-situ solid plaster based on profile complexity, ceiling height and access.
  6. Step 6Cast a new mould in the workshop where a missing section or rose needs reinstating, allowing proper curing time before fixing.
  7. Step 7Remove damaged or loose plaster and prepare the ceiling substrate, addressing any ceiling repair needed first.
  8. Step 8Fix the new or matched cornice and rose sections, making good the joints, mitres and returns.
  9. Step 9Fill, sand and prime the finished plasterwork, allowing full curing time before handover for decoration.

Questions

Cornice & Period Moulding Restoration questions in Hammersmith and Fulham

How quickly can Lian start cornice, ceiling rose and period moulding restoration for Victorian and Edwardian terraces in Hammersmith and Fulham?

Hammersmith and Fulham is part of our regular West 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 Hammersmith and Fulham?

Yes. Hammersmith and Fulham falls within the area Lian Construction serves across Greater London.

We're converting a period house in Hammersmith and Fulham into flats. What finishing work causes the most problems?

Plastering and tiling tend to show up faults fastest, especially in older solid-wall properties where the base isn't perfectly flat or dry. If the substrate hasn't been prepped properly you'll see cracking, hollow tiles or uneven paint finishes within months rather than years. On conversion work we'd always want to check moisture levels and wall condition before quoting the finishing stages, not just at the end of the job.

Can you just fit stock DIY coving instead of matching the original profile?

We can, if that's genuinely what a homeowner wants for a room where matching the original isn't a priority, but we'll say so plainly if a generic profile is going to look visibly wrong next to surviving original detail elsewhere in the property, or if it risks devaluing a period interior. In listed buildings, replacing original detail with a non-matching modern profile can also raise consent issues that a like-for-like reinstatement avoids.

Does Lian Construction remove asbestos or handle rewiring behind ceiling roses?

No. Where an older ceiling has a textured or Artex-style coating from a later refurbishment that might contain asbestos, we don't test for or remove it ourselves, that requires a specialist, and in some cases a licensed, asbestos contractor, and we'll say so rather than working around a suspected material. Similarly, if a ceiling rose conceals or needs rewiring for a pendant light, that's notifiable electrical work under Part P and needs a registered electrician, not something we carry out as part of plastering.

How much does it cost to repair a small crack in cornice?

A short, straightforward crack repair or re-fixing of a loose section, typically a metre or two, usually costs £80–£150. Where a longer run has come away from the ceiling and needs re-scrimming and re-bedding rather than a simple fill, expect £250–£400. If the crack keeps returning after a previous repair, it's usually a sign the ceiling behind it hasn't been properly dried out or the substrate is still moving, and that needs addressing before the cornice is patched again.

Talk to Lian Construction about Hammersmith and Fulham

Send the site address in Hammersmith and Fulham, photos if available, and the cornice & period moulding restoration work you need. We can review the scope and arrange the next step.

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