Wimbledon's price growth is driving refurbishment demand, with only a handful of dedicated roofing contractors covering the borough. Merton falls well within the South West London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For rear, side-return, wraparound and two-storey house extensions with structural engineering and Party Wall compliance in Merton, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.
Merton's housing stock reflects its position as an outer London borough that developed in waves from the Victorian era through to the interwar suburban boom. Areas closer to Wimbledon tend to have larger Victorian and Edwardian villas and terraces, many built for a more prosperous commuter market, while surrounding streets carry the bay-fronted terraced housing typical of London's inner-outer ring. Further out, 1920s and 1930s semi-detached houses are common, built as London's suburbs expanded along the tram and rail lines, along with pockets of post-war infill and some purpose-built flats. This mix means roof types vary considerably across the borough, from slate and clay tile pitched roofs on older properties to felt or asphalt flat roofs on extensions and later additions. Older properties in particular tend to carry original roof coverings well past their practical lifespan, since replacement is disruptive and often deferred until problems become visible internally. For homeowners and landlords, this generally means roofs, guttering and chimney stacks on period stock are worth checking on a regular basis rather than waiting for a leak to force the issue.
Wimbledon's continued price growth is pushing more homeowners toward refurbishing rather than moving, since improving an existing property is often more cost-effective than trading up in a rising market. This tends to increase demand for structural work, extensions and roof repairs or replacements, particularly where owners are looking to protect or add value ahead of a future sale. At the same time, the borough appears to have relatively few dedicated roofing contractors compared to the level of demand, which can mean longer lead times for quotes and bookings, especially during busier periods of the year. For homeowners, this makes it worth getting roof surveys and repair quotes booked in early rather than waiting until a problem becomes urgent, since availability can be tighter than in areas with more roofing specialists to choose from. Landlords managing rental stock in and around Wimbledon face a similar pressure, needing roofing and refurbishment work completed reliably to keep properties lettable and compliant. Given the limited number of specialist contractors, homeowners and landlords alike may find it sensible to build a relationship with a contractor ahead of time rather than searching from scratch when an issue arises.
Drainage Surveys and Build-Over Agreements with Thames Water
A detail that catches a lot of homeowners out mid-project: if your proposed extension footprint sits within 3m of a public sewer, or within 1m of a public lateral drain, Building Regulations Part H4 requires formal approval from the water company - a build-over agreement, usually with Thames Water in London - before foundations can be dug, on top of and separate from your Building Control approval. Many Victorian and Edwardian terraces have combined drains running under the rear garden roughly where a rear extension footprint naturally falls, sometimes shared with the neighbouring property, and the exact route often isn't obvious from the surface. We commission a CCTV drain survey at the design stage specifically to catch this before foundations are priced, because discovering a drain run under your footprint once excavation has started means redesigning the foundation, diverting the drain, or repositioning the extension - all of which cost far more mid-dig than they would have on paper. A build-over agreement application typically adds a few weeks to the pre-construction programme, which is manageable if it's planned in from the start alongside the Party Wall notice period and Building Control application, but becomes a genuine hold-up if it's only discovered once the trial pit is already open.
Why Victorian, Edwardian and Post-War Terraces Change the Job
A large share of London's housing stock is Victorian or Edwardian solid-wall terrace, built without a cavity and often without a reliable damp-proof course by modern standards, and that changes how an extension has to be built onto it, not just what it looks like. The party wall you're building against is typically a shared, load-bearing brick wall on a shallow strip foundation, often considerably shallower than a modern extension's foundation would be designed to, and one that was never engineered for a modern extension's loads or for excavation running alongside it - which is exactly why the Party Wall etc. Act 1996 exists for adjacent excavation within 3m or 6m of a neighbour's foundation. Rear additions on these houses also routinely reveal problems only once you open the wall up: loose or corroded wall ties, historic cracking from long-settled movement, or a foundation shallower than drawings assumed, any of which can force a design change mid-job. Side-return extensions in particular usually need some degree of underpinning to the existing party wall foundation because the new extension's floor level and foundation depth don't match what's already there. Ex-council maisonettes and 1930s semis behave differently again - often with cavity walls and more standardised foundations, but bringing their own issues around shared freehold consent, leasehold consent requirements, and sometimes concrete-frame or non-standard post-war construction that behaves quite differently to solid brick when you cut a new opening. Conservation area status, which covers large parts of inner and outer London, can also remove permitted development rights entirely, meaning what looks like a straightforward rear extension needs full planning permission because of the borough's Article 4 Direction.