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Fire door installation in Kensington and Chelsea

Fire door installation in Kensington and Chelsea, London

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.

Kensington and Chelsea overview

Fire door installation in Kensington and Chelsea

Premium Central London borough where finishing quality — tiling, plastering, decorating — is the deciding factor on every project. Kensington and Chelsea falls well within the Central London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For fire door installation work in Kensington and Chelsea, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.

Kensington and Chelsea is dominated by period property. Stucco-fronted Victorian and Georgian terraces, garden squares, mansion blocks and mews houses make up a large share of the borough's housing stock, much of it dating from the 1800s. Ceiling heights, cornicing, sash windows and original plasterwork are common in these properties, which is part of why finishing quality carries so much weight on a project here — the existing detailing sets a high bar, and any new tiling, plastering or decorating has to sit alongside it convincingly. A large proportion of the borough falls within conservation areas, and there is a higher-than-average concentration of listed buildings compared with most of London. Basement conversions, loft extensions and internal reconfigurations of older terraces are common project types, often on properties that have already been altered several times over the decades. Newer flats and mansion blocks exist too, particularly nearer the borough's busier corridors, but even these tend to have higher specification finishes than the London average, so the same emphasis on tiling, plastering and decorating quality applies across most of the housing stock, not just the period buildings.

In a premium Central London borough like this, the finish is what homeowners and landlords notice first and remember longest. Structural work matters, but a project can be sound behind the walls and still feel like a failure if the tiling is uneven, the plaster shows joints under light, or the decorating looks rushed. That raises the bar for any contractor working here — clients in Kensington and Chelsea tend to have seen good finishing before, in their own homes or others', and they know what it looks like when it is done properly. For landlords, this matters commercially as well as aesthetically: a flat presented with a poor finish is harder to let at the rents the area commands, and tenants at this price point notice the same details owner-occupiers do. For homeowners, redoing a badly finished tiling or plastering job is disruptive and expensive, which makes getting it right the first time worth more here than in most areas. Given the concentration of high-value property, competition among contractors able to deliver consistently high-quality finishing work is real, and it tends to be finishing standard, not price alone, that decides who gets the work.

Given how much of Kensington and Chelsea's housing stock is period property, conservation area status and listed building consent are recurring considerations for refurbishment work in the borough. Many alterations that would be straightforward elsewhere — replacing windows, altering facades, or changing rooflines — can require planning permission or listed building consent here, and conservation area rules often extend to details like window materials, render finishes and external decoration colours. This does not affect every job; plenty of internal refurbishment, redecorating and like-for-like repair work falls outside these controls. But for anything touching the exterior, the roofline or a listed structure, it is worth checking the property's planning status early, ideally before finalising a scope of work, since consent requirements can affect both timeline and the materials that can be used.

Who is legally responsible for fire doors in London properties

The Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 puts a duty on the responsible person, usually the freeholder, managing agent or landlord, to maintain fire doors on common escape routes in blocks of flats, HMOs and other multi-occupied buildings. The Fire Safety (England) Regulations 2022 added specific checks for blocks with communal areas: quarterly checks on fire doors in common parts and, where the responsible person can gain access, annual checks on flat entrance doors, including making sure self-closers work and doors close fully onto the latch. For HMOs, most London boroughs run mandatory or additional licensing schemes under the Housing Act 2004, and fire doors with self-closers to bedrooms, kitchens and other rooms opening onto escape routes are checked at the licensing inspection, alongside fire alarms and emergency lighting. Buildings over 18 metres or seven storeys fall under the Building Safety Act 2022 regime, with tighter record-keeping expectations. None of this makes an individual landlord a fire engineer, but it does mean fire doors need to be specified, fitted and recorded properly rather than treated as a standard joinery job, and having evidence of correct installation matters as much as the door itself.

What drives the cost of a fire door installation

Price varies more than people expect, mostly because of what's around the door rather than the door itself. A standard FD30 doorset in a modern opening is more straightforward than one for a Victorian conversion with an out-of-square frame or a non-standard width, which needs packing, planing or a bespoke doorset order. Glazed vision panels add cost because they need fire-rated glass, usually Georgian wired or a clear pyrolytic type, set in matching intumescent beading rather than ordinary bead. Finish matters too: a painted softwood doorset costs less than a pre-finished oak veneer set specified to match existing joinery in a period conversion. Ironmongery spec, whether that's a simple latch or a lock with access control cabling routed through, adds time. Removing and disposing of the old door and frame, then making good the architrave, decoration and sometimes plaster reveals, is often underestimated. Access is a real factor on blocks, working around occupied flats, booking a lift or porter's assistance in an ex-council block, or fitting around a lease's permitted working hours all affect programme length. A single doorset call-out costs more per door than a block or portfolio programme, where doors are ordered and fitted in batches.

FD30 and FD60 certified doorsets
Intumescent strips, cold smoke seals and self-closers fitted correctly
Fire door surveys for HMOs and blocks
Regular coverage of Kensington and Chelsea and the wider Central London area

Signs to look for

Do you need fire door installation in Kensington and Chelsea?

  • A recent fire risk assessment listed fire doors as an action point or rated them unsatisfactory for the building.
  • A house is being converted into flats or an HMO, and bedroom, kitchen or escape route doors need fire-rated doorsets fitted.
  • Communal entrance or stairwell doors in the block look original, unlabelled, or clearly predate any fire door specification.
  • The door doesn't close fully onto the latch by itself, or it catches and sticks on the frame or floor when swinging shut.

How the work is handled in Kensington and Chelsea

  1. Step 1Confirm the required door schedule
  2. Step 2Supply certified doorsets
  3. Step 3Install to correct tolerances
  4. Step 4Gauge, photograph and sign off each door

Questions

Fire door installation questions in Kensington and Chelsea

How quickly can Lian start fire door installation work in Kensington and Chelsea?

Kensington and Chelsea is part of our regular Central 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 Kensington and Chelsea?

Yes. Kensington and Chelsea falls within the area Lian Construction serves across Greater London.

What goes wrong most often with fire doors that fail inspection?

Excessive gaps around the door edge, missing or painted-over intumescent seals, and closers that have been disconnected or wedged open are the most common failures we see on inspection.

How long does it take to fit a single fire doorset?

A single doorset, including hanging, seals and closer, is typically fitted within a day, though a full block or portfolio of doors is scheduled as a programme so occupied rooms aren't all disrupted at once.

Do all flat entrance doors in a block need to be fire doors?

In blocks of flats, entrance doors opening onto a shared hallway or stairwell used as an escape route are almost always required to be fire doors, typically FD30 with a self-closer, because they hold back fire and smoke on the escape route while other residents get out. Internal doors within a single self-contained flat aren't usually required to be fire rated unless the property is an HMO, or the building's fire strategy specifically calls for it, for example where a flat has an internal escape route through another room. The building's fire risk assessment sets out exactly what's required for each door, and it's worth checking that before assuming.

Is the landlord or the leaseholder responsible for fire doors in a block of flats?

Responsibility for common parts, including doors onto shared escape routes, usually sits with the freeholder or managing agent as the responsible person under fire safety legislation. A flat's own entrance door is often the leaseholder's responsibility to maintain under the lease, though the responsible person still has a duty to check it's adequate as part of the building's fire risk assessment. In practice we're instructed both ways, by managing agents replacing communal doors across a whole block, and by individual leaseholders replacing their own front door because a survey or fire risk assessment flagged it, or simply because it's due for renewal.

Talk to Lian Construction about Kensington and Chelsea

Send the site address in Kensington and Chelsea, photos if available, and the fire door installation work you need. We can review the scope and arrange the next step.

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