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 soundproofing existing walls, ceilings and floors for noise between rooms and between flats 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.
Regulations and sign-off most homeowners don't expect
Building Regulations Part E, resistance to the passage of sound, only becomes a statutory requirement with mandatory pre-completion sound testing when work creates a material change of use, most commonly converting a house into two or more flats. In that scenario, an approved testing body carries out airborne and impact sound tests on the new separating walls and floors before completion, typically costing £400–£450 plus VAT per pair of tests, with discounts if multiple flats on one site are tested in the same visit. If you're simply upgrading an existing party wall or floor voluntarily, because you can hear your neighbour or you're building a home cinema, there's no legal requirement to test and no Building Control sign-off is triggered by the acoustic work itself, though any structural alteration involved still needs to comply with the relevant Building Regulations Approved Documents. Where a new-build separating wall or floor is being constructed as part of a conversion, using a Robust Details registered construction can sometimes avoid the need for on-site pre-completion testing altogether, provided the build is executed exactly to the registered specification, though it's worth confirming with your Building Control body whether that route is available for your specific project before assuming it applies.
The most common mistakes we find in other people's soundproofing
The single most common failure is rigid fixings bridging the decoupling layer, a resilient bar screwed too tightly, or fixed directly through into the joist at both ends, defeats the entire point of the system because sound simply travels through the metal fixing instead of being absorbed. We regularly find single-layer plasterboard sold and fitted as 'soundproof board' with no resilient layer behind it at all, which adds a small amount of mass but no meaningful acoustic improvement over the original wall. Gaps left around socket boxes, pipework penetrations and the wall-ceiling-floor junction are flanking paths that let sound bypass an otherwise well-built system entirely, and acoustic sealant at these junctions is frequently skipped to save an hour's work. On floors, we've seen resilient layers fitted but then the floating floor deck nailed or screwed straight down through it into the joists below, again bridging the very isolation the material was there to provide. And we've seen ceiling systems fitted without addressing the wall-to-ceiling junction, so airborne noise happily travels around the treated ceiling via the party wall instead of through it.