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Render and facade repair in Newham

External rendering and facade repair in Newham, London

Lian Construction carries out external rendering and facade repair across London, working from our Kingston upon Thames base out across South West London and the wider capital. We apply and repair sand and cement render, K Rend and other silicone renders, and monocouche systems, and we re-render properties where existing render has failed or trapped damp behind it. Work includes full elevation re-rendering, patch and crack repair, pointing and detailing around window and door reveals, and facade cleaning and repainting. Many of our render projects are on Victorian and Edwardian solid-wall terraces, where the right render specification depends on the wall build-up as much as the finish you want.

Newham overview

External rendering and facade repair in Newham

Stratford regeneration continues to drive refurbishment and repair demand across converted and new-build stock alike. Newham falls well within the East London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For external rendering and facade repair work in Newham, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.

Newham's housing stock is a mix of eras rather than one dominant type. Older neighbourhoods away from the Stratford core still have Victorian and Edwardian terraces, along with inter-war and post-war housing, much of it converted into flats over the decades. Around Stratford itself, the picture is different: large-scale new-build apartment blocks have gone up since the Olympic regeneration began, alongside conversions of older industrial and commercial buildings into residential use. This mix means work in the borough spans everything from traditional repair and repointing on period terraces to snagging and remedial work on newer builds, plus the specific issues that come with converting non-residential buildings into homes. For a contractor, this variety matters: a Victorian terrace and a five-year-old conversion flat fail in different ways and need different approaches. Owners and landlords in Newham are as likely to be dealing with settlement cracks in a new block as damp in an old one, so it helps to work with a contractor who isn't only set up for one type of property.

The continued regeneration around Stratford has kept refurbishment and repair demand high across Newham, and that demand isn't limited to new-build. Converted properties, some created during earlier waves of development, are now old enough to need attention themselves, while newer stock often surfaces defects and snagging issues in the first few years. For homeowners and landlords, this means the borough has a steady flow of work but also a busy trade, and finding a contractor with availability can take longer than in quieter areas. Landlords managing flats in converted or new-build blocks tend to deal with a narrower set of recurring issues, plasterwork, minor leaks, finishing snags, while owner-occupiers in older terraces further from the centre are more likely to need broader repair or refurbishment work. Given how much building activity the regeneration has brought to the area, it's worth getting quotes early and being clear about timescales, since demand can affect how quickly work gets scheduled. Property type also affects who you need: not every firm working in Newham is equally comfortable across period terraces and modern conversions.

Render and damp on Victorian solid-wall properties

A large proportion of the render repair we're called out for on Victorian and Edwardian houses traces back to the same underlying issue: a hard cement render applied to a solid brick wall that was never designed to be sealed in that way. Solid walls, common in London terraces built before cavity construction became standard in the 1920s and 30s, rely on being able to absorb and release moisture through the wall itself. A modern cement render, particularly one applied at a rich mix ratio with little lime content, is far less permeable than the brick behind it, and once moisture gets in, through a crack, a poorly detailed reveal or rising damp at the base of the wall, it can't easily evaporate back out through the render. Instead it tracks sideways or gets pushed further into the wall, sometimes showing up as damp patches on internal plaster well away from the original point of failure. This is why re-rendering a Victorian solid wall after a damp problem often means specifying a lime-based render, typically an NHL 3.5 or similar hydraulic lime mix, rather than simply replacing like-for-like with the cement render that likely contributed to the problem in the first place. Where we're asked to deal with damp linked to render on a solid wall, we'd typically expect the sequence to run: confirm the wall is genuinely solid rather than an unrecognised cavity, remove the render causing the problem, allow the wall to dry out for a period before re-rendering, and then apply a breathable lime specification rather than rushing straight back to a like-for-like cement finish. Skipping the drying period is a common shortcut that undermines an otherwise correct specification, since re-rendering over a wall that's still saturated just traps the existing moisture behind the new coat rather than solving anything. Lime render isn't a universal fix for every damp issue, and where the underlying cause is a specific defect such as a failed damp proof course or a blocked cavity tray, that needs addressing on its own terms, but on a genuinely solid-wall property, breathability is usually the right starting principle for whatever render goes back on.

Render and External Wall Insulation (EWI)

External Wall Insulation systems, increasingly common on solid-wall Victorian and ex-council properties looking to improve thermal performance, change how the render on a wall needs to be specified and detailed. EWI involves fixing rigid insulation boards to the outside of the wall, then applying a reinforced base coat with mesh embedded into it, followed by a top coat, usually a silicone or acrylic render, rather than rendering directly onto brick. Where we're asked to re-render a wall that already has EWI installed, or to repair render that's failed on an EWI system, the detailing at openings matters more than on a solid masonry wall, since window and door reveals, meter boxes and pipe penetrations all need the insulation and render built up correctly around them to avoid a thermal bridge or a point where water can track behind the system. Reveal depth changes too, since adding insulation and render to an external wall typically adds 80 to 150mm of thickness depending on the insulation used, which affects how windows, door thresholds, cills and rainwater goods need to be extended or re-detailed to sit properly against the new wall face. We don't design or specify EWI insulation systems as a standalone service, but where render work is needed on a wall with EWI already fitted, or as part of a wider EWI installation being coordinated by others, we work to the system manufacturer's detailing requirements so the render performs and weathers as the system was designed to.

Sand and cement, K Rend and monocouche render systems
Render crack repair and re-rendering after damp issues
Lime render specification for solid-wall period properties
Regular coverage of Newham and the wider East London area

Signs to look for

Do you need external rendering and facade repair in Newham?

  • The existing render is a hard cement finish on a Victorian or Edwardian solid-wall property and hasn't been reassessed for breathability.
  • You're installing External Wall Insulation and need the finishing render coat specified and applied to the system correctly.
  • Render around window and door reveals has cracked or come away, letting water track in around the frames during heavy rain.
  • The render looks tired, stained or algae-covered but is otherwise sound, and a clean and repaint would refresh it without full replacement.

How the work is handled in Newham

  1. Step 1Survey the elevations and existing render
  2. Step 2Agree the render system and colour
  3. Step 3Strip, repair or re-render as needed
  4. Step 4Finish, seal and clean down the site

Questions

External rendering and facade repair questions in Newham

How quickly can Lian start external rendering and facade repair work in Newham?

Newham is part of our regular East 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 Newham?

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

Can render be cleaned and repainted instead of replaced?

Yes, where the existing render is structurally sound and the problem is mainly appearance, algae staining, general dirt or a dated colour. We clean the surface properly, treat any biological growth, and repaint with a suitable masonry paint, breathable where the render itself is breathable, rather than sealing a permeable render with the wrong type of paint. This is a considerably cheaper option than full re-rendering, though it only makes sense where the render is genuinely sound underneath, so we'll check for cracking and hollow areas before recommending a clean and repaint over a repair.

Does render work interact with brickwork repointing or repair?

Yes, quite often. Where render has failed and needs stripping back to brick, the exposed brickwork sometimes needs repair or repointing before new render goes on, particularly where the wall has been damp for a while or where old pointing has failed underneath the render. We can coordinate rendering and brickwork repair as one project so the wall gets a proper structural and weatherproofing fix before the finish goes back on, rather than rendering over brickwork that needed attention first and storing up a problem behind the new coat. This tends to work out cheaper overall than instructing two separate contractors, since scaffold and access only need arranging once for both trades.

What happens if damp comes back after re-rendering?

If a damp problem persists after re-rendering with an appropriate breathable specification, the cause is usually something other than the render itself, a failed or missing damp proof course, a blocked cavity tray, high external ground levels bridging the damp course, or a leaking gutter or downpipe soaking the wall repeatedly. We'll come back and look at render workmanship if that's genuinely in question, but where the render was specified and applied correctly, ongoing damp usually points to one of these other causes needing its own investigation, sometimes by an independent damp specialist, rather than a render defect. Checking external ground levels and gutters is often the quickest place to start before assuming the render itself has failed.

Can you repair a small area of cracked or damaged render without redoing the whole wall?

Yes, where the surrounding render is sound. We cut back the damaged area to a clean edge, key the substrate and blend a patch repair in, matching texture as closely as possible, though on an older, weathered elevation a perfect colour match isn't always achievable without repainting the whole face. If cracking or hollow-sounding render is widespread rather than isolated, we'll say so before quoting a patch repair, since patching a wall that's failing more generally usually just means paying for the same repair again within a year or two.

Talk to Lian Construction about Newham

Send the site address in Newham, photos if available, and the external rendering and facade repair work you need. We can review the scope and arrange the next step.

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