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Kitchen refits and renovations in Lewisham

Kitchen renovation in Lewisham, London

Lian Construction carries out full kitchen 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, first-fix plumbing and electrics, cabinetry, worktops, tiling, flooring and appliance installation, rather than leaving you to coordinate a plumber, electrician, tiler and kitchen fitter separately. Work ranges from a like-for-like refit in a galley kitchen in a Victorian terrace to a full open-plan knock-through creating a kitchen-diner, or a kitchen renovation within a flat where shared pipework and freeholder consent need factoring in. We survey the space, agree a realistic layout, and sequence the trades properly so the finished kitchen works day to day, not just on handover.

Lewisham overview

Kitchen renovation in Lewisham

Large Victorian and Edwardian housing stock with almost no dedicated roofing or refurbishment coverage from established competitors. Lewisham falls well within the South London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For kitchen renovation work in Lewisham, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.

Lewisham's housing stock is dominated by Victorian and Edwardian terraces and bay-fronted semis, typical of the wave of building that spread across inner and near-inner London boroughs from the 1870s through to the 1910s. Expect solid brick external walls, slate or clay-tiled pitched roofs, timber sash windows, and party wall arrangements shared between neighbouring terraced properties. Many homes will have seen later alterations, loft conversions, rear extensions, or conversion into flats, which adds complexity when repair or refurbishment work touches roofline, guttering, or shared structural elements. Original slate roofing on housing of this age is now well over a century old in many cases, and a proportion will have already been part-replaced with concrete or synthetic tiles at some point, often inconsistently. This mix of original and patched-up roofing is common across older London housing stock generally. Bay windows, decorative brickwork, and chimney stacks typical of the period also mean roofing and refurbishment work often needs to account for period detailing rather than treating every job as a standard modern re-roof.

With such a large concentration of Victorian and Edwardian property, Lewisham has an ongoing and fairly predictable need for roof repair, re-roofing, and general refurbishment work, simply because housing stock of this age reaches the point where original materials need attention or full replacement. What stands out is the apparent gap in dedicated roofing and refurbishment coverage from established contractors in the area. For homeowners and landlords, that generally translates into longer waits for quotes, more reliance on general builders rather than roofing specialists, and less local choice when comparing contractors who actually focus on period property work. Landlords managing older converted or rented properties face this more acutely, since compliance-driven repairs (damp, roof leaks, structural issues) don't wait for convenient timing. A borough with this much ageing housing stock and limited specialist coverage tends to mean steady, ongoing demand rather than one-off spikes, which matters for anyone planning maintenance or budgeting for future works. It also means homeowners may need to look slightly further afield or be more selective when vetting who they bring in, since the usual density of local roofing specialists seen in some other London boroughs doesn't appear to be there yet.

Victorian and Edwardian terraces of the kind common in Lewisham are frequently found within conservation areas across London, a pattern seen widely in boroughs with this era of housing stock. Where a property sits inside a conservation area, roof alterations, changes to visible materials, or additions like rooflights and dormers may need planning permission rather than falling under permitted development. Even outside a conservation area, terraced and semi-detached houses of this age can have restricted permitted development rights depending on prior extensions or alterations already carried out. It's worth checking a property's specific planning history and conservation status with the local authority before finalising scope, particularly for anything visible from the street or affecting a shared roofline with a neighbouring property. This isn't unique to Lewisham, but it is a practical step worth building into any refurbishment timeline for period housing of this type.

Galley kitchens, open-plan layouts and London flat constraints

London's housing stock shapes what a kitchen renovation can realistically achieve more than most people expect going in. Victorian and Edwardian terraces were typically built with a narrow galley kitchen at the rear of the house, often only just wide enough for units on both sides with a walkway between them, and getting a dishwasher, full-height fridge-freezer and enough worktop space into that footprint means planning the layout carefully rather than defaulting to a standard run of units. Corner storage solutions, slimline appliances and making full use of wall height with taller cabinets all help in a galley kitchen where floor space genuinely can't be increased without structural work. Open-plan kitchen-diners, created by knocking through the wall between the kitchen and the adjoining dining room or reception room, are one of the most requested changes we see in period conversions, and they change the kitchen brief considerably: an island or peninsula becomes possible, sightlines and ventilation matter more once the kitchen is part of a shared living space, and the extractor solution needs planning around the new open volume rather than a single enclosed room. That kind of knock-through is structural work in its own right, needing a steel beam sized by a structural engineer and Building Control sign-off, and it's planned and priced as a separate but coordinated phase of the same project rather than folded quietly into the kitchen fit-out. Flats bring a different set of constraints again. Concrete floor and ceiling construction in ex-council and purpose-built blocks limits where new pipework can be chased in, so moving a sink or dishwasher waste run sometimes means a boxed duct or a raised section of floor rather than a chase cut into a structural slab. Where a change affects shared pipework, a soil stack serving flats above or below, or anything touching the building's structure, freeholder or managing agent consent is usually needed before work starts, and that's a separate process from the renovation itself, one we'll flag clearly at survey stage so it's factored into the programme rather than discovered once units have already been ordered.

How long a kitchen renovation realistically takes

Timelines depend heavily on scope and specification. A like-for-like kitchen replacement, fitting new units, worktop and appliances into the same footprint as the old kitchen without moving plumbing or structural walls, typically takes one to two weeks once strip-out starts. Where the layout is changing, a sink or hob moving position, new tiling throughout, or flooring being replaced as well, three to four weeks is more realistic once first-fix plumbing and electrics, boarding, tiling and worktop templating are all sequenced in. Worktop lead time is one of the more common causes of a kitchen programme running longer than people expect, particularly for stone worktops, which are templated only once cabinets are fixed in their final position and then fabricated off site, typically adding one to two weeks between template and installation that the rest of the kitchen simply has to wait for. Bespoke or made-to-measure cabinetry carries its own lead time too, sometimes several weeks from order to delivery, which is worth factoring in at the design stage rather than assuming units will be available as soon as strip-out finishes. Where a kitchen renovation includes a knock-through or other structural change, the programme extends further again: steel beams need ordering and fabricating to size, and Building Control inspections happen at set stages of the structural work rather than all at once, which adds real time before the kitchen fit-out itself can even begin. We set out a realistic programme at quoting stage once we know the specification and whether structural work is involved, rather than a generic figure that doesn't reflect what your particular kitchen needs, and we'll flag early where a long-lead item like a stone worktop or bespoke cabinetry is likely to become the limiting factor on the finish date.

Full strip-out kitchen renovations and refits
Cabinetry, worktop and appliance installation
Galley, open-plan and flat kitchen layouts
Regular coverage of Lewisham and the wider South London area

Signs to look for

Do you need kitchen renovation in Lewisham?

  • Appliances are failing one after another and patching them individually no longer makes sense compared with a full renovation.
  • A leak or damp issue has damaged units, flooring or the worktop and the kitchen needs stripping back and reinstating properly.
  • You're planning a wider refurbishment and want the kitchen sequenced alongside other rooms rather than treated as a separate later project.
  • You're in a leasehold flat and any plumbing or waste changes need checking against freeholder or managing agent consent before work starts.

How the work is handled in Lewisham

  1. Step 1Survey the kitchen and agree the layout
  2. Step 2Strip out and first-fix plumbing and electrics
  3. Step 3Fit cabinetry, worktops and tiling
  4. Step 4Connect appliances, test and snag before handover

Questions

Kitchen renovation questions in Lewisham

How quickly can Lian start kitchen renovation work in Lewisham?

Lewisham is part of our regular South 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 Lewisham?

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

How long does a full kitchen renovation take?

A like-for-like refit, replacing units, worktop and appliances within the same footprint, usually takes one to two weeks once strip-out starts. Where the layout is changing, or new tiling and flooring are involved, three to four weeks is more realistic once you factor in worktop templating and fabrication time, particularly for stone. Where the project includes a structural knock-through, the programme extends further again for Building Control stages and steel fabrication. We'll give a firm programme once we've surveyed the kitchen and confirmed the specification, rather than a generic figure that doesn't reflect what your kitchen actually needs.

Do you connect gas hobs and ovens?

Our electricians handle the electrical connection for kitchen appliances, but where a hob or oven runs on gas, the final gas connection and certification must be carried out by a Gas Safe registered engineer, not by Lian Construction directly. We coordinate this as part of the overall programme, timing the Gas Safe engineer's visit alongside the rest of the second-fix trades so it doesn't hold up the job, but the actual gas work and certificate come from that qualified third party, in the same way a structural engineer signs off a steel beam calculation rather than us doing so ourselves.

Can you knock through into an open-plan kitchen-diner?

Yes, though it's structural work in its own right and needs planning as a distinct phase of the project. A steel beam sized by a structural engineer, Building Control sign-off, and in terraced properties potentially a party wall award, all need factoring into the programme before the kitchen fit-out itself begins. We coordinate the structural opening and the kitchen renovation as one sequenced project rather than two unrelated jobs, so the beam, first-fix services and eventual cabinetry all line up with the finished layout rather than being decided separately.

What's the difference between flat-pack and rigid cabinets?

Flat-pack units arrive as panels and are assembled and fixed on site, and cost meaningfully less than rigid, pre-built carcasses. Rigid units come already assembled and tend to hold their shape better over years of daily use, particularly around drawer runners and hinge points, since they're built and jointed in a factory rather than screwed together on site. Which suits a project depends on budget and how heavily the kitchen will be used, and we'll talk through the trade-off honestly rather than defaulting to one option regardless of your circumstances or the age of your property.

Talk to Lian Construction about Lewisham

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

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