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Kitchen refits and renovations in Tower Hamlets

Kitchen renovation in Tower Hamlets, London

Lian Construction carries out full kitchen renovations across London, from Kingston upon Thames out across South West London and the wider capital. We handle the whole refit as one project: strip-out, first-fix plumbing and electrics, cabinetry, worktops, tiling, flooring and appliance installation, rather than leaving you to coordinate a plumber, electrician, tiler and kitchen fitter separately. Work ranges from a like-for-like refit in a galley kitchen in a Victorian terrace to a full open-plan knock-through creating a kitchen-diner, or a kitchen renovation within a flat where shared pipework and freeholder consent need factoring in. We survey the space, agree a realistic layout, and sequence the trades properly so the finished kitchen works day to day, not just on handover.

Tower Hamlets overview

Kitchen renovation in Tower Hamlets

Fast-changing East London borough with new-build and period conversion work side by side, and limited dedicated refurbishment coverage. Tower Hamlets falls well within the East London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For kitchen renovation work in Tower Hamlets, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.

Tower Hamlets has one of the more varied housing profiles in London, and that variety runs street by street rather than area by area. You'll find Victorian and Edwardian terraces alongside former warehouse and dock buildings converted to residential use, ex-local authority blocks, and a steady run of newer riverside and canalside developments built over the last two to three decades. This mix means the borough doesn't have one dominant building type or a single set of typical repair issues the way some more uniform outer boroughs do. A period conversion in an old industrial building brings different challenges to a Victorian terrace, and both differ again from a flat in a newer block. For a contractor, that means jobs in Tower Hamlets often call for familiarity with older brick and timber construction on one street and modern building methods on the next. For homeowners and landlords, it means the right approach to a refurbishment or repair job depends heavily on when and how the specific building was put up, not just its postcode.

Tower Hamlets is described as fast-changing, and that shows in how the building stock and the local trades market both look. New-build activity sits close to older conversion stock, so demand covers everything from snagging and fit-out work on newer flats to structural and fabric repairs on period conversions. The borough is also noted as having limited dedicated refurbishment coverage, which in practice often means homeowners and landlords have fewer established local firms to choose from for general repair, maintenance, and refurbishment work compared with better-served parts of London. That gap can mean longer waits for quotes, less local knowledge of specific building types on any given street, and more reliance on firms travelling in from other boroughs. For landlords managing older converted properties or flats in newer developments, this makes it worth building a relationship with a contractor early rather than scrambling when something goes wrong. Homeowners taking on period conversion projects should expect to do a bit more legwork sourcing a contractor who understands both older building fabric and the practicalities of a busy, fast-changing part of London where access, parking, and building management rules can all add friction to a job.

Where work involves period conversions, older warehouse or industrial buildings, or Victorian and Edwardian terraces, it's worth checking early whether the property sits within a conservation area or carries listed status, as this is common across many parts of inner London with older building stock. Conservation area status can affect what's allowed for external alterations, windows, roofing materials and extensions, while listed buildings usually need separate listed building consent for changes that affect character, even internally in some cases. This isn't guaranteed for any given property in Tower Hamlets, but given the amount of period conversion work in the borough, it's a sensible first check before finalising scope or materials. A quick look at the local planning portal or a conversation with the council's conservation team before work starts can save time and rework later.

How kitchen renovation fits with knock-throughs and wider refurbishment work

A kitchen renovation rarely stays entirely within the kitchen's four walls. Where it includes an open-plan knock-through into a dining room or reception room, that structural element is planned and costed as its own phase, with a structural engineer's calculations, a steel beam sized and fabricated to span the new opening, and Building Control involvement running alongside the kitchen fit-out rather than as an afterthought once units are already ordered. Terraced properties bring the Party Wall Act into consideration too where the knock-through affects a wall shared with a neighbour, which needs factoring into the programme early since notice periods and, where required, a party wall award can take several weeks to resolve before structural work can start. Where a kitchen renovation is part of a wider refurbishment, a full house strip-out or an extension, we sequence the kitchen alongside the rest of the programme so first-fix plumbing and electrics happen at the same stage as the rest of the property, rather than as an isolated job that holds up decoration and second-fix work elsewhere. Tiling within a kitchen is delivered to the same standard as our dedicated tiling service, and where a client only wants a new splashback or floor tiled without a full kitchen refit, that smaller scope sits under our tiling service instead of being priced as a full renovation. We also coordinate with plasterboard repair where a wall needs opening up for new pipework or cabling and making good afterwards, and with leak repair where a kitchen renovation follows water damage that needs the affected floor or units properly assessed and, where necessary, replaced rather than fitted straight over a problem that hasn't actually been resolved. Having one team responsible for the whole sequence, from any structural opening through to the last appliance connection, avoids the common problem of a kitchen fitter being booked before a knock-through has even been signed off by Building Control.

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.

Full strip-out kitchen renovations and refits
Cabinetry, worktop and appliance installation
Galley, open-plan and flat kitchen layouts
Regular coverage of Tower Hamlets and the wider East London area

Signs to look for

Do you need kitchen renovation in Tower Hamlets?

  • You're planning a wider refurbishment and want the kitchen sequenced alongside other rooms rather than treated as a separate later project.
  • You're in a leasehold flat and any plumbing or waste changes need checking against freeholder or managing agent consent before work starts.
  • The layout no longer suits how you actually cook and live, with too little worktop space or appliances positioned awkwardly for daily use.
  • The kitchen hasn't been updated in fifteen years or more and the units, worktop and appliances all show their age together.

How the work is handled in Tower Hamlets

  1. Step 1Survey the kitchen and agree the layout
  2. Step 2Strip out and first-fix plumbing and electrics
  3. Step 3Fit cabinetry, worktops and tiling
  4. Step 4Connect appliances, test and snag before handover

Questions

Kitchen renovation questions in Tower Hamlets

How quickly can Lian start kitchen renovation work in Tower Hamlets?

Tower Hamlets 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 Tower Hamlets?

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

How much does a kitchen renovation cost in London?

It varies considerably depending on cabinetry type, worktop material, whether the layout is changing, and how much tiling, flooring and appliance work is involved. A like-for-like refit with flat-pack units, laminate worktop and standard appliances costs meaningfully less than a reconfigured layout with rigid cabinetry, stone worktops and a knock-through into an adjoining room. We give a fixed price after surveying the kitchen and agreeing the specification with you, broken down by cabinetry, worktops, tiling, flooring, appliances and any plumbing or electrical changes, rather than a single figure that hides where the money is going. Getting more than one quote is sensible, but check each one is pricing the same scope in the same detail.

Can you handle the whole kitchen renovation, or just parts of it?

We take on the full renovation as one project, strip-out, plumbing, electrics, cabinetry, worktops, tiling and appliance installation, coordinated by one team rather than passed between separate tradespeople you'd need to book and manage yourself. If you only need one element, such as retiling an existing kitchen splashback without changing the layout, that sits under our tiling service instead, and we're happy to be clear about which scope suits your project before you commit to either one.

How long does a full kitchen renovation take?

A like-for-like refit, replacing units, worktop and appliances within the same footprint, usually takes one to two weeks once strip-out starts. Where the layout is changing, or new tiling and flooring are involved, three to four weeks is more realistic once you factor in worktop templating and fabrication time, particularly for stone. Where the project includes a structural knock-through, the programme extends further again for Building Control stages and steel fabrication. We'll give a firm programme once we've surveyed the kitchen and confirmed the specification, rather than a generic figure that doesn't reflect what your kitchen actually needs.

Do you connect gas hobs and ovens?

Our electricians handle the electrical connection for kitchen appliances, but where a hob or oven runs on gas, the final gas connection and certification must be carried out by a Gas Safe registered engineer, not by Lian Construction directly. We coordinate this as part of the overall programme, timing the Gas Safe engineer's visit alongside the rest of the second-fix trades so it doesn't hold up the job, but the actual gas work and certificate come from that qualified third party, in the same way a structural engineer signs off a steel beam calculation rather than us doing so ourselves.

Talk to Lian Construction about Tower Hamlets

Send the site address in Tower Hamlets, photos if available, and the kitchen renovation work you need. We can review the scope and arrange the next step.

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