Neighbouring Kingston, with a similar stock of period and riverside properties suited to full refurbishment and roof replacement work. Richmond upon Thames falls well within the South West London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For kitchen renovation work in Richmond 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.
Richmond upon Thames sits alongside Kingston and shares a similar mix of period and riverside properties. Expect a good number of Victorian and Edwardian terraces and villas, along with detached and semi-detached houses from the interwar years, many with later extensions and loft conversions added over time. Riverside stretches bring their own building types, older properties close to the water that were built before modern damp-proofing standards, along with some larger detached houses on wider plots. As with much of outer London, roofs on this older stock tend to be slate or clay tile, often original or close to it, with the valleys, flashings, and chimneys typically the first parts to need attention. Loft space is often tight in these properties, which makes roofline work and extensions a common route for adding usable space rather than moving house. This combination of age, riverside exposure, and a general preference among owners to extend and upgrade rather than relocate is what tends to drive demand for full refurbishment and roof replacement work in this part of south west London.
Given the age and type of housing stock, roof replacement and full refurbishment work tend to be steady sources of demand in Richmond upon Thames, much as they are in neighbouring Kingston. Owners of period and riverside properties are often dealing with roofs and structural elements that are decades past their original install, so replacement or significant repair becomes a practical necessity rather than a cosmetic choice. Riverside proximity can also mean a closer eye needed on damp and moisture-related issues, which often surface alongside roofing problems and get picked up during a wider refurbishment. Because this is an area where owners tend to invest in upgrading rather than moving, full refurbishment projects, spanning roofing, structural work, and internal modernisation, are a natural fit for the type of property found here. For a homeowner or landlord, this generally means budgeting for work that addresses the building as a whole rather than a single room, and choosing a contractor comfortable working on older properties where standard modern assumptions about structure, insulation, or roof pitch may not apply. Landlords with older buy-to-let stock in particular tend to prioritise roof condition, since it affects both letting standards and long-term maintenance costs.
With period property forming a significant part of the housing stock in this part of south west London, conservation area status and, in some cases, listed building designation are worth checking before starting work. Many outer London boroughs have conservation areas covering older residential streets, and these can affect what materials and roof profiles are acceptable, along with rules around extensions, dormers, and changes to the front of a property. Riverside locations sometimes carry additional planning considerations too. None of this means work cannot go ahead, but it usually means a bit more upfront checking with the local council before committing to a design or materials choice. As a general rule, it is worth confirming conservation area or listed status early, since it shapes what a roof replacement or extension can look like and how long approval might take.
What drives the cost of a kitchen renovation
Kitchen cost varies more than almost any other room in the house, because so much of the price sits in choices that look similar on a drawing but cost very differently to supply and fit. Cabinetry is the first major variable: flat-pack units, supplied in panels and assembled on site, cost meaningfully less than rigid, pre-built carcasses, but rigid units tend to hold their shape better over years of use and are usually a better specification where drawers and doors will see heavy daily use. Worktop material is the next big driver. Laminate is the most affordable option and has improved considerably in appearance, but it can't take direct heat from a hot pan and scratches more easily than harder materials. Solid wood worktops look good and can be sanded back if they mark, but need regular oiling and aren't the most practical choice around a sink unless properly sealed and maintained. Quartz and other engineered stone sit at the top of the price range, templated and cut to the installed cabinet run by a specialist fabricator, and are considerably more resistant to heat, scratching and staining than either alternative, which is why they're the most common upgrade choice where budget allows. Appliance specification adds its own range, from budget integrated appliances through to higher-end ranges, and whether appliances are supplied by us or by you affects the quote structure either way. Layout changes affect cost too: moving a sink or hob to a new position, particularly one that requires extending gas or waste runs further than the existing layout allows, costs more than fitting a new kitchen into the same footprint as the old one. Specification tiers matter beyond individual items too, a budget-tier kitchen with flat-pack units, laminate worktops and standard appliances suits a rental property or a first refurbishment on a tight budget, a mid-tier specification with rigid cabinetry and a laminate or entry-level stone worktop suits most family homes, and a higher specification with bespoke cabinetry, engineered stone and integrated higher-end appliances suits a kitchen intended to last well beyond the next decade without needing replacing again. We break quotes down by these categories, cabinetry, worktops, tiling, flooring, appliances and any plumbing or electrical changes, rather than a single lump figure, so you can see where a specification change actually moves the price, and where there's room to adjust if the budget needs to move without compromising the parts of the kitchen that matter most to daily use.
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.