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Wood, LVT, laminate and carpet fitting in Westminster

Flooring Installation in Westminster, London

Engineered wood, laminate, LVT and carpet supply-and-fit across London homes and rentals, with subfloor preparation for solid concrete floors common in ex-council flats and lower-ground rooms, and end-of-tenancy flooring replacement for landlords between tenancies.

Westminster overview

Flooring Installation in Westminster

Central London borough with strict listed-building and conservation area rules shaping most refurbishment and repair projects. Westminster falls well within the Central London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For engineered wood, laminate, LVT and carpet supply-and-fit across London homes and rentals in Westminster, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.

Westminster's housing stock is dominated by Georgian and Victorian terraces, stucco-fronted townhouses, mansion blocks and mews properties, much of it now sitting within conservation areas or under listed status. Many homes were built or extended over the 18th and 19th centuries, later divided into flats during the 20th century, so period features such as sash windows, cornicing and original brickwork are common even in converted properties. This mix means refurbishment work often has to reconcile old building fabric, solid walls, timber floors, ageing roofs, with modern expectations around insulation, plumbing and electrics. Basement conversions and rear extensions are frequent projects given the value of extra space in a dense, built-up borough, though these tend to involve more structural and party wall considerations than similar work elsewhere. Roofing on older properties often means working with slate, lead flashing or valley gutters rather than modern tiled systems. Because so much of the borough falls under conservation or listed status, as the local context makes clear, homeowners and landlords here are more likely than most to need contractors comfortable working within heritage constraints rather than a standard new-build specification.

Demand for refurbishment and repair work in Westminster is shaped heavily by the borough's conservation area and listed-building rules. Most projects, whether a full renovation, a roof repair or a smaller internal alteration, need to be planned around what planning and heritage consent will actually allow, which narrows the pool of contractors able to take work on with confidence. Homeowners and landlords often find that getting quotes takes longer here than in other boroughs, because a proper job needs someone who understands listed building consent, conservation area restrictions and the materials a planning officer is likely to accept, not just someone who can do the building work itself. For landlords managing period conversions, this adds a layer of process on top of the usual repair and maintenance cycle. Central London's density also means projects are frequently constrained by access, parking restrictions and proximity to neighbouring properties, all of which affect how work gets scheduled and priced. Given the strict framework the borough operates under, it generally pays to bring a contractor into the conversation early, before drawings are finalised, so that any planning or heritage issues are flagged before money is spent on a design that will not get approved.

Large parts of Westminster sit within conservation areas, and a significant number of individual buildings are listed, which means many refurbishment and repair projects need planning permission, listed building consent, or both, even for work that would be permitted development elsewhere. Typical triggers include changes to windows and doors, roofing materials, external render or brickwork, and any rear or basement extension. Westminster City Council, as the local planning authority, generally expects like-for-like materials and detailing on listed or conservation area properties, so contractors need to be familiar with what tends to get approved rather than assuming a standard specification will pass. Timescales for consent can run longer than a straightforward planning application, and unauthorised work on a listed building can carry serious consequences. It is worth checking a property's listed status and conservation area boundary early, and discussing likely material and design constraints with a contractor before committing to a scope of work.

Typical flooring installation prices in London
ItemTypical range
Laminate flooring, per m²£25–£45/sqm
Engineered wood flooring, per m²£45–£85/sqm
LVT (luxury vinyl tile), per m²£35–£65/sqm
Carpet incl. underlay, per m²£20–£45/sqm

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

What actually drives the cost

Material tier is the biggest single factor: engineered wood ranges from around £40–£50 per m2 for a budget oak-veneer board up to £80–£100+ per m2 for a wide-plank premium finish, before fitting; LVT material runs roughly £15–£25 per m2 budget to £50–£60 per m2 for a premium herringbone-effect plank; laminate material sits around £12–£35 per m2 depending on thickness and water-resistance; carpet ranges from around £15–£25 per m2 for polypropylene through £25–£45 per m2 mid-range twist pile to £45–£90+ per m2 for wool or wool-blend, plus £3–£14 per m2 for underlay. Subfloor prep is the second big variable: self-levelling compound typically adds £15–£30 per m2 supplied and applied, and a full screed replacement where the existing floor is badly out or a damp-proof membrane needs installing can add £30–£40 per m2 on top of that. Removal and disposal of old flooring (especially old glued-down carpet gripper and adhesive residue on concrete) typically adds £5–£10 per m2. Door undercuts, new threshold strips and reinstating skirting are usually priced per door/run rather than per m2, and stairs cost more per step than open floor because of the extra cutting and nosing detail.

How long the work actually takes

A straightforward LVT or laminate re-fit over a sound, level subfloor in a single room can be done in a day. Add carpet across a whole flat and most jobs run one to two days depending on the number of rooms and staircases. Engineered wood needs its acclimatisation period factored in first, typically 48-72 hours on site in the room it will be fitted, longer in winter when a property has been unheated, before a single board is laid, so a full-flat engineered wood job is realistically a three to five day job even though the fitting itself might only take two of those days. Any subfloor levelling compound or screed needs its own curing time before a covering can go down on top of it, usually 24-72 hours for self-levelling compound depending on depth and ventilation, and longer for a full sand-and-cement screed, so a job that needs significant subfloor work before fitting can add several days to the overall programme. Access also matters: a ground-floor flat with street parking for a van is quicker to service than a third-floor walk-up flat where every board and bag of compound has to be carried up.

We moisture-test every solid concrete subfloor with a calibrated hygrometer before fitting anything on top of it, not just a visual once-over, because trapped moisture under a sealed LVT or engineered floor rots the substrate invisibly.
Engineered wood is acclimatised on site for a minimum of 48-72 hours before it's fitted, not fitted straight off a cold van, because centrally-heated London flats can shrink or gap a board within weeks otherwise.
Subfloor levelling, screed and damp-proof membrane work go into the same quote as the floor covering, so you get one price and one point of accountability instead of a flooring fitter blaming 'someone else's screed' when it goes wrong.
Regular coverage of Westminster and the wider Central London area

Signs to look for

Do you need flooring installation in Westminster?

  • Cold, damp patches or a faint musty smell coming up through carpet or laminate in a ground-floor or basement room.
  • LVT or laminate that clicks loudly or feels loose underfoot along one specific run of boards.
  • Skirting stained, swollen or bubbling at the base along an external or ground-floor wall.
  • Threshold strips between rooms lifting, cracking, or sitting proud enough to catch a foot.

How the work is handled in Westminster

  1. Step 1Site survey and moisture test of the existing subfloor across all rooms being worked on.
  2. Step 2Discuss floor covering options against room use, underfloor heating, budget and any lease requirements for hard flooring.
  3. Step 3Confirm a written quote itemising material, subfloor prep, removal/disposal and labour.
  4. Step 4Remove and dispose of the existing floor covering, including gripper rods and residual adhesive.
  5. Step 5Prepare the subfloor: levelling compound, screed or damp-proof membrane as the survey requires, allowing proper curing time.
  6. Step 6Deliver material to site and, for engineered wood, acclimatise it in the room for 48-72 hours minimum before fitting.
  7. Step 7Trim doors and remove skirting where the new floor build-up height requires it.
  8. Step 8Fit underlay and install the new floor covering, working room by room with correct expansion gaps at the perimeter.
  9. Step 9Reinstate skirting, fit threshold and transition strips, then carry out a final inspection and clear away all waste.

Questions

Flooring Installation questions in Westminster

How quickly can Lian start engineered wood, laminate, LVT and carpet supply-and-fit across London homes and rentals in Westminster?

Westminster is part of our regular Central 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 Westminster?

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

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

Sometimes, though it is rarely a straightforward swap. Conservation area rules often require replacement windows to match the original in material, proportion and detailing, and standard double-glazed units do not always meet that. Slimline double glazing or secondary glazing is sometimes accepted as a compromise. It is worth getting planning advice specific to your property before ordering anything, since requirements can vary between conservation areas within the same borough.

How much does LVT flooring cost supplied and fitted?

LVT typically costs £45–£90 per m2 supplied and fitted in London, meaning around £900–£1,800 for a 20m2 room. Budget click LVT sits at the lower end, and premium herringbone-effect planks push towards the top of that range. It generally works out cheaper than engineered wood while handling moisture better, which is one reason it's a common choice for rental turnarounds.

Is laminate flooring cheaper than LVT?

Yes, generally. Laminate typically costs £30–£60 per m2 supplied and fitted, against £45–£90 per m2 for LVT. Laminate is a printed image layer over a fibreboard core, so it's less tolerant of moisture than LVT, which is a fully synthetic vinyl product, and that makes LVT the better choice for kitchens, hallways and any room with a real risk of spills.

What does carpet fitting cost per m2 in London?

A typical mid-range carpet with underlay and gripper rod, supplied and fitted, costs roughly £20–£45 per m2 in London, with budget polypropylene carpet from around £15 per m2 and premium wool or wool-blend carpet running £45–£90+ per m2. Fitting labour alone in London is typically £6–£11 per m2, at the higher end of UK regional rates.

Talk to Lian Construction about Westminster

Send the site address in Westminster, photos if available, and the flooring installation work you need. We can review the scope and arrange the next step.

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