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Bathroom refits and renovations in Islington

Bathroom renovation in Islington, London

Lian Construction carries out full bathroom renovations across London, from Kingston upon Thames out across South West London and the wider capital. We handle the whole refit as one project: strip-out, replumbing, tanking wet areas, tiling, electrics and sanitaryware, rather than leaving you to coordinate a plumber, tiler and electrician separately. Work ranges from a straightforward bathroom refresh in a Victorian terrace to a small ensuite squeezed into a box room, or a full wetroom conversion. We survey the room, agree a realistic layout for the space available, and sequence the trades properly so the finished bathroom is watertight, compliant and built to last, not just good-looking on handover day.

Islington overview

Bathroom renovation in Islington

Dense Georgian and Victorian terraces where structural, damp and roofing work regularly forms part of wider refurbishment projects. Islington falls well within the North London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For bathroom renovation work in Islington, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.

Islington's housing is dominated by dense terraces of Georgian and Victorian origin, built when the borough was developed as closely packed residential streets rather than spaced-out suburbs. Georgian terraces tend to be taller and narrower, often over three or four storeys plus a basement, with solid brick construction and timber floors typical of the period. Victorian terraces, built somewhat later, follow a similar pattern but with more variation in room layout and roof form. Many of these properties have been subdivided into flats over the decades, which adds shared services, party structures and mixed ownership into the mix when refurbishment work is planned. Because the stock is old, original materials such as lime mortar, timber sash windows and slate roofing are common, and these behave differently to modern equivalents when it comes to moisture, movement and repair. Basements and lower ground floors, common in Georgian terraces, bring their own damp and structural considerations. Given the age and density of this housing, structural, damp and roofing issues are rarely isolated problems, they tend to surface together and get picked up as part of a broader refurbishment rather than treated as one-off repairs.

The terraced, high-density nature of Islington's streets means refurbishment work here is rarely straightforward. Shared party walls, tight access, and neighbouring properties on both sides all affect how structural, damp and roofing work needs to be planned and sequenced. A roof repair on a terrace often can't be treated in isolation, since scaffolding, party wall agreements and adjoining roofline junctions all come into play. Damp issues in older solid-wall construction are also common and often need investigating properly rather than papered over, since the wrong fix, such as modern cement render on a lime-built wall, can make things worse over time. For homeowners and landlords, this means refurbishment projects in Islington tend to involve more coordination than in areas with newer, more uniform housing stock. It also means there's genuine demand for contractors who understand period construction and can handle structural, damp and roofing elements as part of one joined-up project rather than passing the homeowner between separate specialists. Given how tightly packed the streets are, minimising disruption to neighbours and working within the practical constraints of terraced access is as much a part of the job as the building work itself.

Given the prevalence of Georgian and Victorian terraces in Islington, conservation area status and, in some cases, listed building designation are worth checking before work starts. Conservation areas commonly restrict changes to visible elements such as roof coverings, chimneys, windows and front elevations, and may require planning permission for work that would be permitted development elsewhere. Listed buildings, where they exist, bring additional consent requirements for structural and material changes, even for repairs. This isn't unique to Islington, conservation areas and listed buildings are common across many of London's inner and outer boroughs, but the density of period property here means the chances of a project falling within one are higher than average. It's generally worth checking a property's planning status with the local authority early, since this can affect timelines, material choices and the scope of what's straightforward to change.

How bathroom renovation fits with other trades

A bathroom renovation rarely stays entirely within the bathroom walls. Moving a waste pipe sometimes means lifting floorboards in the room below or accessing a void through a neighbouring room, and rerouting a soil stack in a converted flat can affect a shared wall or a floor void serving the flat below, which needs planning around and, in some cases, notice to a neighbour rather than discovering the constraint once floorboards are already up. Where the property is part of a wider refurbishment, we sequence the bathroom alongside the rest of the programme so first-fix plumbing and electrics happen at the same stage as the rest of the house, rather than as an isolated job that holds up decoration and second-fix work elsewhere in the property. Tiling within a bathroom renovation is delivered to the same standard as our dedicated tiling service, since the two are effectively one job in practice and the finished waterproofing depends on the tiling and the tanking beneath it being coordinated properly, but where a client only wants the existing bathroom retiled without a full refit, that smaller scope sits under our tiling service instead rather than being priced as a full renovation. We also coordinate with plasterboard repair where a wall needs opening up for new pipework or cabling and making good afterwards to match the surrounding finish, and with leak repair where a bathroom renovation follows water damage that needs the affected structure properly dried out and reinstated before the new suite goes in, rather than building a new bathroom on top of a problem that hasn't actually been resolved. Having one team responsible for the whole sequence avoids the common problem of a tiler being booked before the plumber has confirmed final fitting positions.

What drives the cost of a bathroom renovation

Bathroom cost varies more than most rooms in a house because so much of it depends on what's happening behind the tiles rather than the visible finish alone. Moving the WC or shower to a new position is usually the single biggest cost driver, since a soil pipe needs a consistent fall, typically around 18mm per metre for a 100mm pipe, back to the stack or drain, and where the new position doesn't allow that fall naturally, the floor sometimes needs building up, joists notched and strengthened within Building Regulations limits, or a macerator unit considered instead of gravity drainage. Retiling from scratch costs more once you factor in stripping old tiles, checking and levelling the substrate, and fitting a waterproofing membrane before a single tile goes up, rather than tiling over what's already there. Sanitaryware and fittings vary enormously in price for a similar footprint: a basic close-coupled WC and a wall-hung one with a concealed cistern occupy the same floor space but cost very differently to supply and fit, and taps, shower valves and brassware range from budget chrome mixers to thermostatic bar valves and rainfall heads at several times the price. Underfloor heating, a walk-in shower rather than a bath, and a wetroom floor formed to falls rather than a standard shower tray, all add both cost and time to the programme. We break quotes down by these categories, structural and plumbing changes, waterproofing, tiling, sanitaryware and electrics, rather than a single lump figure, so you can see exactly where a change in specification moves the overall price. As a broad guide, a like-for-like refit with standard sanitaryware and mid-range tiling sits at the more affordable end of the range, a full reconfiguration with a wetroom floor and higher-specification fittings sits considerably higher, and a small ensuite squeezed into an awkward space can sometimes cost more per square metre than a larger, more straightforward bathroom, simply because the fixed costs of plumbing, tanking and electrics don't shrink in proportion to the room size.

Full strip-out bathroom refits and wetrooms
Tanking and waterproofing to wet areas
Zone-rated electrics and ventilation to BS 7671
Regular coverage of Islington and the wider North London area

Signs to look for

Do you need bathroom renovation in Islington?

  • You're planning a wider refurbishment and want the bathroom sequenced alongside other rooms rather than treated as a separate later project.
  • Ventilation is poor, with condensation and mould building up on the ceiling or around the window despite an existing extractor fan.
  • The bathroom hasn't been updated in fifteen years or more and the sanitaryware, tiling and waterproofing all show their age together.
  • Grout or silicone around the bath or shower has failed repeatedly despite resealing, suggesting the waterproofing behind the tiles has broken down.

How the work is handled in Islington

  1. Step 1Survey the bathroom and agree the layout
  2. Step 2Strip out and first-fix plumbing and electrics
  3. Step 3Tank, board and tile the wet areas
  4. Step 4Fit sanitaryware, test and snag before handover

Questions

Bathroom renovation questions in Islington

How quickly can Lian start bathroom renovation work in Islington?

Islington 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 Islington?

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

Do you fit underfloor heating in bathrooms?

Yes, we can supply and fit electric underfloor heating mats or cables beneath the tiled floor, coordinated with a qualified electrician for the final connection, testing and certification. It goes in after levelling and before tiling, using a flexible adhesive suited to the slight movement caused by heating cycles. It's worth deciding on underfloor heating early in the design, since it adds a stage to the floor build-up and affects the finished floor height, which can matter in a small bathroom where door clearance is already tight.

What ventilation does a bathroom legally need?

Building Regulations Part F requires mechanical extraction in any bathroom without an openable window to outside air, ducted out rather than just recirculating into the loft or a void. Even where there's a window, many bathrooms still benefit from a fan, particularly windowless ensuites and shower rooms where condensation builds up quickly. We size the fan to the room volume and, for windowless bathrooms, typically fit one with a timer overrun so it keeps running for a few minutes after the light switches off, which clears humidity properly rather than stopping the moment you leave the room.

Can bathroom renovation work be done while I'm still living in the property?

For a single bathroom, yes, provided there's another bathroom or WC available elsewhere in the property during the works, since the room being renovated will be out of use for most of the job, typically from strip-out through to the tanking curing. Where it's the only bathroom in the property, we'll talk through options for minimising how long you're without facilities, though a full renovation with tanking and tiling realistically needs the room out of action for the bulk of the programme rather than usable in stages.

Do you offer a guarantee on waterproofing and tanking work?

We agree workmanship cover as part of the written quote before work starts, since the appropriate period depends on the scope of tanking and tiling involved. We test wetroom floors and shower waterproofing before tiling wherever practical, rather than assuming a membrane has taken without checking, because finding a fault after the tiles are down is a far more disruptive fix than catching it beforehand. If an issue does show up after handover, get in touch and we'll come back to assess it properly.

Talk to Lian Construction about Islington

Send the site address in Islington, photos if available, and the bathroom renovation work you need. We can review the scope and arrange the next step.

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