Fire door surveys
We can survey existing doors across a property or portfolio, grading each as compliant, repairable or requiring replacement, with a photographic report.
Fire door installation in Hammersmith and Fulham
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.
Hammersmith and Fulham overview
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 fire door installation work 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.
We can survey existing doors across a property or portfolio, grading each as compliant, repairable or requiring replacement, with a photographic report.
A certified fire doorset is not just a heavier door. FD30 and FD60 leaves have a dense mineral or timber composite core, usually chipboard or particleboard bonded with additives that char and insulate rather than burn through, faced with veneer, laminate or a paint-grade skin. Around the door edge and matching frame rebate, a continuous intumescent strip, usually graphite-based, sits in a groove and expands under heat to seal the gap and stop fire and smoke passing through, working alongside a cold smoke seal, either a brush pile or a fin, that blocks smoke at ambient temperature before the intumescent activates. The frame has to be matched to the leaf as tested, not just any timber frame of the right thickness. Ironmongery is part of the tested assembly too. FD60 leaves typically weigh 40 to 50kg and need at least three, often four, hinges fitted with intumescent hinge pads, and any lock, latch or vision panel has to be within the scope of what the doorset was certified with. A colour-coded certification plug or label on the top edge of the door references the test or assessment it was built to, which is what an inspector or fire risk assessor is looking for when checking a door on site.
Signs to look for
Questions
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.
Yes. Hammersmith and Fulham falls within the area Lian Construction serves across Greater London.
In most cases, yes. A single door usually takes a matter of hours, so a tenant can generally stay in the flat and simply keep clear of the room being worked on at the time. For a full HMO or block programme covering several doors, we sequence the work room by room so only one door is out of action at once rather than leaving the whole property without doors overnight. The main thing to plan for is access, since the tenancy agreement's notice period needs to be given before we can enter, and someone needs to be able to let us in on the day.
Old doors and frames are removed and taken off site as general construction waste, either with us directly or via a skip on larger programmes. They're not usually salvageable for reuse elsewhere in the property, since an old timber door that wasn't fire rated has no certification value even if the timber itself looks sound. If a landlord wants to keep a period front door for its character rather than dispose of it, that's worth flagging before work starts so it can be stored rather than skipped, though it obviously can't then be reused as the fire-rated replacement.
It doesn't have to, but it usually should for the room to look finished. Certified doorsets are available pre-finished in a range of veneers, laminates or as a paint-grade skin ready for site decoration, and we'd normally match the new door to the existing joinery, skirting or other doors in the property where that's straightforward. On a single flat entrance door replacement in a block, matching the finish used on neighbouring doors is often expected by the managing agent for consistency along the corridor, and it's worth checking that before ordering rather than after.
It depends on the damage. Superficial scuffs or scratches to the surface finish don't usually affect the door's fire performance and can be touched up or repainted, taking care not to cover the seals or certification label. Deeper gouges, holes, or damage that's gone through the facing into the core are a different matter, since the certified performance relies on the leaf being intact as tested, and a door in that condition should be assessed rather than assumed to still be compliant. We can survey a damaged door and advise whether it's repairable or needs replacing.
Send the site address in Hammersmith and Fulham, photos if available, and the fire door installation work you need. We can review the scope and arrange the next step.