Active property market around Peckham and Bermondsey, with 800+ new council homes underway and strong buy-to-let refurbishment demand. Southwark falls well within the South London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For diagnosing and treating rising damp, penetrating damp, condensation and basement tanking issues in Southwark, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.
Housing stock in Southwark spans several distinct eras. Peckham and the surrounding streets have a good deal of Victorian and Edwardian terraced housing, typical of inner London's rapid nineteenth-century expansion, alongside interwar and postwar low-rise estates. Bermondsey, given its history as a working wharf and warehouse district, has a mix of converted industrial buildings sitting alongside traditional terraces and mid-rise blocks, a pattern common in London's former riverside industrial areas. With 800+ new council homes underway across the borough, there's also a growing share of newer build stock, which brings different maintenance and refurbishment needs than the Victorian terraces nearby, think modern insulation, service runs and warranty considerations rather than solid-wall damp and old timber. For homeowners and landlords, this mix means a wide range of jobs: period property repair and upgrade work on older terraces, conversion and refurbishment work on ex-industrial buildings, and fit-out or snagging work on newer stock. It's a borough where a contractor needs to be comfortable moving between very different building types and ages, sometimes on the same street.
Southwark's property market, particularly around Peckham and Bermondsey, has stayed active for some time, and that shows in the volume of refurbishment and improvement work landlords and owner-occupiers are commissioning. Buy-to-let refurbishment demand is strong: with rental interest firm in these areas, landlords are investing in kitchen and bathroom upgrades, rewiring and general modernisation to keep properties competitive and up to current letting standards. The 800+ new council homes underway across the borough also point to a wider building pipeline locally, which tends to pull more trades and subcontractor activity into the area generally, and can make it harder to get a reliable contractor booked in at short notice. For homeowners, this means it's worth planning refurbishment work with some lead time rather than expecting immediate availability, particularly for larger or structural jobs. For landlords managing multiple units, coordinating between-tenancy refurbishment efficiently matters more here than in quieter markets, since void periods are costly and good contractors are being pulled in several directions by both private and public sector work at once.
The Mistakes We See Most Often in Previous 'Damp Proofing' Work
The most common mistake we see on London properties that have already had "damp proofing" done is a DPC injection that was undermined the moment it was finished, rather than a badly executed injection itself. A frequent example is a wall correctly injected with a chemical DPC but then rendered over on the outside straight afterwards, bridging the new DPC from the exterior face and bringing rising-damp symptoms back within a year or two - the injection worked fine, but nobody checked what was happening outside. Another is replastering straight after injection without allowing proper drying time, leading to cracking or blown plaster because the masonry was still wet behind the new finish. A third is replastering salt-contaminated masonry with standard gypsum plaster instead of a salt-retardant system, which looks fine for a few months and then blows as residual salts keep drawing moisture from the air by hygroscopic attraction. A less obvious mistake, and one that's harder for a homeowner to spot, is an injection carried out at the wrong hole spacing or depth for the wall thickness - BS 6576 sets out spacing and depth tolerances relative to wall thickness precisely because a DPC injected too sparsely, or that doesn't reach far enough into a thick nine-inch or fourteen-inch solid wall, leaves gaps in the chemical barrier that groundwater finds within a couple of seasons, invisible until the damp comes back through a wall that was supposedly already treated.
How We Sequence a Damp Job Alongside Other Trades
A damp job rarely stays inside one trade, and having a single contractor coordinate it tends to work out better than a homeowner managing a damp specialist, a plasterer, a scaffolder and a party wall surveyor separately with nobody owning the whole picture. External work - repointing, flashing renewal, gutter clearance, render repair - happens before internal redecoration, because an internal-only fix on a wall still being penetrated from outside will fail again no matter how carefully the injection was carried out. Where scaffold is needed for elevation work, it goes up before external repairs start and stays until any re-rendering has cured enough to come down safely. Sub-floor ventilation work - clearing or reinstating airbricks under a suspended timber ground floor - typically happens early too, since blocked airbricks are often part of the cause and joists take time to recover once ventilation is restored. Internal hack-off and DPC injection follows, then the drying period, then re-plastering with a salt-retardant or lime-based system where hygroscopic salts are present, and only once that's fully dried do we bring in final decoration. Where the job touches structural elements - underpinning, a basement conversion, new sub-floor ventilation requiring floor removal - we coordinate the Building Control route, full plans or building notice depending on scope, and bring in a structural engineer at the point the design is fixed rather than after work has already started.