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Wood, LVT, laminate and carpet fitting in Islington

Flooring Installation in Islington, London

Engineered wood, laminate, LVT and carpet supply-and-fit across London homes and rentals, with subfloor preparation for solid concrete floors common in ex-council flats and lower-ground rooms, and end-of-tenancy flooring replacement for landlords between tenancies.

Islington overview

Flooring Installation 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 engineered wood, laminate, LVT and carpet supply-and-fit across London homes and rentals 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.

Typical flooring installation prices in London
ItemTypical range
Laminate flooring, per m²£25–£45/sqm
Engineered wood flooring, per m²£45–£85/sqm
LVT (luxury vinyl tile), per m²£35–£65/sqm
Carpet incl. underlay, per m²£20–£45/sqm

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

Regulations and sign-off most homeowners don't expect

Building Regulations Approved Document C covers site preparation and resistance to moisture, which is the general principle behind fitting a damp-proof membrane over a solid concrete floor before any covering goes down, particularly relevant in basement and lower-ground rooms and older concrete slabs that predate current DPM standards. Approved Document E covers sound insulation between dwellings, and this is the one that catches out leaseholders specifically: most London flat and maisonette leases include a clause requiring carpet, or hard flooring laid over an acoustic underlay meeting a stated impact sound rating, precisely because a downstairs neighbour's ceiling transmits footfall noise from LVT or engineered wood laid without proper acoustic underlay far more than it does from carpet. Approved Document M covers access, and its principles are the reason we pay attention to threshold height differences at entrances and between rooms rather than just butting two floor heights together. None of this normally requires a Building Control application for a straightforward domestic re-fit, but ignoring the acoustic underlay requirement in a leasehold flat is the single most common way a flooring job turns into a dispute with a freeholder or a downstairs neighbour months after the fitter has gone.

The most common mistakes we find in other people's previous flooring work

No expansion gap left around the perimeter of a floating floor, so engineered wood or laminate has nowhere to move seasonally and ends up peaking or bowing at a wall or a fitted unit within a year. Skirting nailed straight through a floating floor into the subfloor below, which pins the floor down and defeats the point of a floating installation, then cracks or lifts the covering when it tries to expand anyway. LVT or laminate fitted directly over old carpet gripper rods or leftover adhesive without lifting them properly, leaving a visible ridge under the new covering. No damp-proof membrane under LVT or engineered wood on a ground-floor concrete slab, which traps whatever residual moisture is in the concrete and can eventually delaminate the covering or cause a musty smell. Underlay with the wrong tog rating fitted over underfloor heating, which insulates the heat rather than letting it through and leaves rooms cold no matter how high the thermostat is turned up. Doors left uncut after a floor build-up increased by even a few millimetres, so they drag or won't close.

We moisture-test every solid concrete subfloor with a calibrated hygrometer before fitting anything on top of it, not just a visual once-over, because trapped moisture under a sealed LVT or engineered floor rots the substrate invisibly.
Engineered wood is acclimatised on site for a minimum of 48-72 hours before it's fitted, not fitted straight off a cold van, because centrally-heated London flats can shrink or gap a board within weeks otherwise.
Subfloor levelling, screed and damp-proof membrane work go into the same quote as the floor covering, so you get one price and one point of accountability instead of a flooring fitter blaming 'someone else's screed' when it goes wrong.
Regular coverage of Islington and the wider North London area

Signs to look for

Do you need flooring installation in Islington?

  • A spongy or springy feel underfoot, especially near a bay window or over an older suspended timber floor.
  • Carpet held by tack strips that has visible ripples, a slope towards one wall, or lifts at a doorway.
  • A widening gap appearing between the skirting board and the floor covering.
  • Doors that used to close over the old floor no longer closing properly since a previous refit.

How the work is handled in Islington

  1. Step 1Site survey and moisture test of the existing subfloor across all rooms being worked on.
  2. Step 2Discuss floor covering options against room use, underfloor heating, budget and any lease requirements for hard flooring.
  3. Step 3Confirm a written quote itemising material, subfloor prep, removal/disposal and labour.
  4. Step 4Remove and dispose of the existing floor covering, including gripper rods and residual adhesive.
  5. Step 5Prepare the subfloor: levelling compound, screed or damp-proof membrane as the survey requires, allowing proper curing time.
  6. Step 6Deliver material to site and, for engineered wood, acclimatise it in the room for 48-72 hours minimum before fitting.
  7. Step 7Trim doors and remove skirting where the new floor build-up height requires it.
  8. Step 8Fit underlay and install the new floor covering, working room by room with correct expansion gaps at the perimeter.
  9. Step 9Reinstate skirting, fit threshold and transition strips, then carry out a final inspection and clear away all waste.

Questions

Flooring Installation questions in Islington

How quickly can Lian start engineered wood, laminate, LVT and carpet supply-and-fit across London homes and rentals 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.

Is it worth combining roofing and damp work into one project rather than doing them separately?

Often, yes, particularly in older terraces where roofing and damp issues are commonly linked, for example where a roof defect is contributing to penetrating damp lower down. Doing them together can also mean scaffolding or access is only needed once. That said, it depends on the specific issues involved, so it's worth having both assessed together before deciding on a scope of work rather than assuming they should always be combined.

What does carpet fitting cost per m2 in London?

A typical mid-range carpet with underlay and gripper rod, supplied and fitted, costs roughly £20–£45 per m2 in London, with budget polypropylene carpet from around £15 per m2 and premium wool or wool-blend carpet running £45–£90+ per m2. Fitting labour alone in London is typically £6–£11 per m2, at the higher end of UK regional rates.

Why does my subfloor need levelling before new flooring goes down?

Even a few millimetres of unevenness over a run of floor causes floating floors to flex, click, or gap at the joints, and it's one of the most common reasons a new floor starts looking or sounding wrong within months. Self-levelling compound typically costs £15–£30 per m2 supplied and applied, and it's far cheaper to address before fitting than to relay a floor afterwards.

Do I need a damp-proof membrane under a new floor on a concrete slab?

If you're fitting engineered wood, LVT or laminate over a solid concrete ground-floor or basement slab, particularly in an older property or one where the slab's history and moisture performance are unknown, a damp-proof membrane is standard good practice under Approved Document C's general principle of resisting moisture at ground level. Skipping it risks trapped moisture damaging the new covering from underneath.

Talk to Lian Construction about Islington

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

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