Lian Construction's home borough — Kingston is our base, so response times and local knowledge here are the fastest of anywhere we cover. Kingston upon Thames is our home borough, so scheduling, materials and site visits here are the most straightforward of anywhere Lian Construction works. For bathroom renovation work in Kingston upon Thames, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.
Kingston upon Thames sits in the outer south-west of London, and like much of this part of the city its housing stock spans several distinct eras. Victorian and Edwardian terraces are common in the older residential streets, typically solid brick construction with bay windows and original roof structures that need periodic attention as they age. Alongside these sit the 1930s suburban semis and detached houses typical of London's outer boroughs, built during the interwar expansion of the suburbs along transport links. More recent additions include postwar housing and riverside or town-centre apartment blocks, plus a steady stream of loft conversions and rear extensions as owners adapt older properties to modern living. This mix gives the borough a genuinely varied repair and refurbishment profile: older properties often need roofing, damp or structural attention that reflects their age, while newer builds tend to need different work such as extensions, internal reconfiguration or snagging. Being based here gives us regular, hands-on exposure to this full range of property types, from Victorian terrace roofs to more modern extension projects, which helps when it comes to diagnosing issues quickly.
Because Kingston is where Lian Construction is based, this is the area where we have the most day-to-day presence and the shortest travel time between jobs. That matters in practice for anything urgent, from a roof leak after a storm to emergency boarding up, since being close by usually means we can get someone out sooner than if we were travelling in from further across London. It also means our local knowledge is at its strongest here, including familiarity with common issues in the area's housing stock, the types of materials and finishes that tend to suit older versus newer properties, and the practical realities of parking, access and working on busy residential streets. For homeowners and landlords, that translates into a contractor who already knows the borough rather than one learning it on the job. Demand for repair and refurbishment work in Kingston, as in much of outer London, tends to be fairly steady rather than limited to occasional spikes, with owners maintaining older housing stock, converting lofts and updating rental properties between tenancies. Being based locally lets us respond to that ongoing demand without the delays that come from covering a wider area thinly.
Small bathrooms, ensuites and London flat layouts
A lot of London's housing stock was never built with a second bathroom in mind, so ensuite and small bathroom projects usually involve working around genuine space constraints rather than starting from a blank canvas. In Victorian terraces, a boxroom or the end of a landing is often the only realistic space for an ensuite, and getting a shower, WC and basin into 2 to 3 square metres means specifying carefully: a corner shower or a shower over a shortened bath, a wall-hung WC with a concealed cistern to save floor depth, and a slimline or countertop basin rather than a full vanity unit, all chosen to suit the actual room rather than a standard catalogue layout. Ex-council and purpose-built flats bring a different constraint: concrete floor and ceiling construction limits where new pipework and waste runs can be chased in, since cutting deep chases into a structural concrete floor slab isn't something we'd do, so waste routes sometimes need to run in a raised floor void, a boxed duct along a wall, or a false ceiling in the room below instead. Door swing is another common problem in small bathrooms that's easy to overlook on a plan, an inward-opening door can eat into the only usable floor space in the room once a shower enclosure or WC is in position, and switching to an outward-opening or sliding pocket door is often a simple change that makes a genuinely tight layout workable without extending the room itself. Ceiling height under a sloped loft conversion roof, and the position of a soil stack shared with a flat above or below, are further constraints worth checking early in a converted property. We measure and mock up tight layouts with masking tape on the floor before ordering sanitaryware, since a fitting that looks fine on a plan can turn out to clash with a door swing or a radiator once it's actually standing in the room.
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.