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 hmo compliance 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.
Room sizes and amenity provision
Under the mandatory HMO licensing conditions that apply nationally, a bedroom occupied by one person aged 10 or over needs a minimum floor area of 6.51 sqm, two adults sharing a room need 10.22 sqm, and a room used by a single child under 10 needs at least 4.64 sqm. These are the baseline figures under the mandatory conditions of licence regulations, but they are a floor, not a target. Boroughs such as Newham, Croydon and Waltham Forest run additional or selective licensing schemes covering far more of their private rented stock, and some apply amenity standards on top of the mandatory conditions, so we treat the specific scheme covering the property as the reference document rather than assuming the national minimum is the final word.
Where an existing room falls short, the fix depends on what's next to it. A boxroom or deep alcove next door can sometimes be absorbed by removing a stud partition and rebuilding the wall in a new position, which is usually the cheapest route if the structure allows it. Where there's no room to borrow space from, we look at whether a smaller room could be repurposed as a bathroom or second kitchen instead of a bedroom, which changes the room count the licence is assessed against.
Amenity ratios get checked with the same scrutiny. Most councils expect one kitchen for up to five sharing tenants and one bathroom or WC for every four to five, with a minimum number of cooking rings, an oven, a sink and adequate worktop space scaled to occupancy. Inspectors count fittings, not intentions, so a landing with a kettle and microwave won't be accepted as a second kitchen. We've fitted second kitchens and shower rooms into understairs voids and former coal stores, converted boxrooms into ensuites, and split oversized double rooms into two compliant singles with a new stud wall, skirting and door set to match. Getting the room count, sizes and amenity ratio agreed against the correct licensing scheme before work starts is what stops a landlord paying twice for partition changes once an inspecting officer measures the finished rooms.
Ceiling height matters too, and it's the detail people miss most often. Where a room has a sloped ceiling, typically a loft conversion or an attic bedroom in a Victorian terrace, only the area with a ceiling height of at least 1.5 metres usually counts toward the minimum floor area, so a room that looks large on paper can measure short once the sloped sections are excluded. We check this with a laser measure against the actual usable footprint rather than the overall room dimensions on a floor plan. Storage and refuse provision come up less often but do get raised at some inspections, particularly where a conversion has removed a garden shed or coal store that tenants previously used, and we can build in a lockable external store or internal cupboard space as part of the same programme where the council's scheme expects it.
Electrics, gas and interlinked alarm systems
HMO licence conditions extend well beyond the building fabric into the property's electrical and gas installations, and these get checked alongside fire separation at both application and renewal. Councils generally expect a current Electrical Installation Condition Report showing no outstanding C1 or C2 faults, a valid annual Gas Safety Record for any gas appliances and flues, and a fire detection and alarm system that's mains-wired with battery back-up and interlinked across the whole property, typically specified to BS 5839-6 grade D LD2 or LD3 coverage depending on the layout and number of storeys. A grade D system means every alarm is powered from the mains with a tamper-proof standby battery, and LD2 coverage extends beyond just escape routes into rooms presenting the highest fire risk, usually kitchens and living rooms.
We coordinate the electrical and alarm work alongside the fire separation and partition works rather than treating it as a separate visit, because running new alarm cabling between floors usually means lifting the same floorboards or opening the same ceiling voids needed for fire-stopping, and it's more efficient and less disruptive to tenants to do both in one pass through a room. Where an EICR flags an old rewirable fuse board, missing RCD protection, degraded cross-bonding or unearthed lighting circuits, which is common in properties that haven't been rewired since a 1980s or 1990s conversion, we bring in a qualified electrician to remedy those items alongside the room works rather than handing back a property with a partial fix that fails on the electrical side.
Emergency lighting on escape routes is sometimes required for larger or more complex HMOs, particularly where a stairwell or corridor relies on borrowed light that's since been blocked by an internal alteration, and fire strategies for bigger properties can also call for heat detectors in kitchens rather than smoke detectors, since normal cooking activity would otherwise trigger false alarms. We flag any of this during the initial survey rather than after installation, because retrofitting battery packs, conduit or cabling into a ceiling that's already been boarded and skimmed costs considerably more than fitting it during the first pass through the property.
Kitchen and bathroom extraction is another area that gets missed until an inspection picks it up. Building Regulations expect mechanical extraction ducted to external air in any kitchen and bathroom, not just an internal fan recirculating steam back into the room, and where a new kitchen or shower room is being added into an internal space with no external wall nearby, ducting it out can mean running it through a neighbouring room's void or up through a loft, which needs planning at the design stage rather than once tiling is finished. We also check portable appliance testing on any landlord-supplied white goods in shared kitchens, since PAT records are something inspecting officers can ask to see alongside the EICR and gas certificate.