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Sash Windows & Period Joinery in Southwark

Sash Windows & Joinery in Southwark, London

Box sash window repair, draught-proofing and restoration sit alongside internal doors, staircases and period joinery on this page, standard non-fire-rated work for London's Victorian and Edwardian terraces, distinct from the certificated fire doors covered on our dedicated fire doors page.

Southwark overview

Sash Windows & Joinery in Southwark

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 sash window repair and restoration plus internal doors, staircases and period joinery 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.

Typical sash window & joinery prices in London
ItemTypical range
Sash window draught-proofing, per window£250–£450
Sash window restoration, per window£400–£900
Bespoke like-for-like sash replacement, per window£900–£1,600+
Internal door supply and fit, incl. lining£250–£650
Staircase repair£500–£2,500

General London market guidance, not a fixed quote — actual pricing depends on a site survey. Full breakdown: cost guide.

Repair, Restore or Replace: A Decision Framework

The starting question for any sash window is whether the failure is mechanical, cords, paint build-up, seized pulleys, all of which are straightforward and cheap to fix, or structural, meaning rot has actually eaten into the sill, bottom rail or box itself. A simple probe with a bradawl into the end grain of the sill and bottom rail tells you which category you're in before any money is spent. Where rot is confined to a section that can be cut out and spliced, repair is almost always cheaper than replacement and keeps the original glazing bar pattern and glass, which often has slight historic waviness that's part of the character of an older house. Where rot has spread through most of the box or the frame has genuinely failed structurally, a bespoke like-for-like replacement sash is the sensible option, and on a conservation area property it's usually the only option planning will approve anyway. Draught-proofing an otherwise sound sash is nearly always worth doing regardless of whether you restore fully now, because it's the cheapest single measure with the fastest payback in reduced heating bills of anything on this page. Where the real complaint is noise or heat loss rather than the sash's condition, secondary glazing behind a perfectly sound original sash, detailed on our <a href='/eco-retrofit-refurbishment-london'>eco retrofit page</a>, usually solves that without touching the original window at all.

Sash Windows vs Casement and uPVC Replacement

It's worth being clear that sash window repair and restoration is a different job from replacing a window with a modern uPVC or aluminium casement, both in what's involved and in what's likely to be approved. A sash window opens by sliding vertically on cords and weights, has glazing bars dividing the glass into panes on many Victorian and Edwardian houses, and is generally expected by conservation officers to be repaired or like-for-like replaced in timber rather than swapped for a different window type. A uPVC casement replacement is a straightforward like-for-like product swap on a house without conservation constraints, but installing one in place of an original timber sash on a conservation area elevation is one of the more common reasons we see planning enforcement action taken against homeowners who didn't check first, sometimes years after the window went in, when a neighbour complains or the council does an area review. If you're weighing up a full window replacement across a whole house rather than repairing individual sashes, it's worth getting that scoped as part of a wider refurbishment rather than window by window, since access, scaffolding and painting can often be shared across the job.

We diagnose whether a sticking or draughty sash is a paint build-up problem, a cord problem, or genuine timber rot before quoting a fix, so you're not paying for a full restoration when a service and re-hang would do.
Sash cords are replaced with waxed sash cord matched to the original weight-and-pulley system, not cut down to a cheaper synthetic cord that stretches and needs redoing within a couple of years.
Draught-proofing uses routed-in brush pile seals in the staff bead and parting bead, not surface-mounted foam strips that get painted over and stop sealing within a season.
Regular coverage of Southwark and the wider South London area

Signs to look for

Do you need sash windows & joinery in Southwark?

  • Condensation forming between the sashes on a cold morning, which is common on original single glazing and doesn't necessarily mean the window has failed.
  • A staircase tread that visibly flexes or bounces underfoot, not just squeaks, which suggests a structural fixing has failed rather than just a loose wedge.
  • Doors that have dropped on their hinges and now catch on the frame or floor, common in older houses where the frame itself has settled slightly.
  • Gaps opening up between skirting and wall, or between architrave and door lining, as a house's timber frame and plaster move slightly with the seasons.

How the work is handled in Southwark

  1. Step 1Survey each window, door or staircase element individually rather than quoting a blanket per-item price.
  2. Step 2Test sash mechanisms, probe timber for rot, and check staircase fixings from underneath where access allows.
  3. Step 3Confirm conservation area status, Article 4 directions and, for flats, whether freeholder consent is needed before agreeing scope.
  4. Step 4Provide a written, itemised quote broken down by window, door or staircase element and repair type.
  5. Step 5Order matched materials, waxed sash cord, brush-pile seals, period door profiles or matched skirting, ahead of the site visit.
  6. Step 6Carry out repairs in the sequence that suits the wider project, windows and staircases before final decoration, doors after flooring.
  7. Step 7Splice in new timber where rot is found rather than filling over it, then prime and undercoat before final paint.
  8. Step 8Test every sash, door and stair fixing on completion before calling the job finished.
  9. Step 9Leave the property clean, with offcuts and old materials removed, and photograph completed work for your records.

Questions

Sash Windows & Joinery questions in Southwark

How quickly can Lian start sash window repair and restoration plus internal doors, staircases and period joinery in Southwark?

Southwark 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 Southwark?

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

How far in advance should I book a contractor in Southwark right now?

With the property market fairly active around Peckham and Bermondsey and a good number of new council homes underway locally, decent contractors and trades can get booked up more than in quieter areas. For smaller jobs you might get someone within a few weeks, but for larger refurbishment work, especially anything needing multiple trades in sequence, it's sensible to get quotes and book several weeks or more ahead where you can. If you're working to a fixed moving or letting date, build in some contingency.

How much does full sash window restoration cost per window?

A fuller restoration, new sash cords, easing and re-hanging, re-puttying and draught-proofing where the timber itself is sound, typically costs £400–£900 per window. Where rot has to be cut out and spliced with new timber, add roughly £150–£250 per repair on top. A bespoke like-for-like replacement sash, where the existing frame is too far gone to repair, runs £900–£1,600 or more per window.

Can I replace my sash windows with double glazing in a conservation area?

It depends on the borough and the specific elevation. Many London councils accept slimline double-glazed timber sashes that closely match the original glazing bar pattern and sightlines, particularly on rear elevations, but standard double glazing is often refused on a street-facing elevation in a conservation area, and Article 4 directions in many boroughs remove permitted development rights that would otherwise allow a like-for-like swap without planning permission. Check with the local planning authority, or ask us to check on your behalf, before committing to a replacement.

Is secondary glazing a good alternative to replacing my sash windows?

Yes, for most conservation area properties it's the more practical and more readily approved route to better insulation and noise reduction, since it doesn't alter the original sash at all. It typically costs £350–£600 per window supplied and fitted. We cover secondary glazing in more detail on our <a href='/eco-retrofit-refurbishment-london'>eco retrofit and secondary glazing page</a> rather than duplicating that here.

Talk to Lian Construction about Southwark

Send the site address in Southwark, photos if available, and the sash windows & joinery work you need. We can review the scope and arrange the next step.

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