Backed by Hampstead Renovations|Sister Company: Hampstead Chartered Surveyors (RICS Regulated)
Belgravia Painters& Decorators

N1 · EC1V

New Build Painters & Decorators in Islington

Specialist new build painting and decorating in Islington. Expert tradesmen blending traditional techniques with modern durability.

Decorating New Build Properties in Islington

Islington occupies a particular place in London's interior design landscape: an inner-city area of genuine architectural character that has attracted a highly educated, design-conscious population. The Georgian and early Victorian terraces of Canonbury and Barnsbury — among the finest stock brick residential architecture in London — create a specific set of decorating challenges and opportunities. Canonbury Square, with its perfect Georgian proportions and mature plane trees, sets the tone for an area where period authenticity is prized and where the line between conservation compliance and personal expression is carefully navigated. Upper Street, the area's commercial spine, runs through the heart of Islington from Angel to Highbury, lined with the Victorian shopfronts that give the area its characteristic rhythm. The streets to the east — Prebend Street, Alwyne Road, Compton Terrace — contain some of the most complete terraces of late Georgian housing anywhere in London, with original ironwork, stone steps, and the distinctive two-over-two sash windows that define the period. Islington's painting and decorating market is shaped by owners who are typically knowledgeable about period architecture, engaged with their properties' history, and sophisticated in their approach to colour and material. The work tends to be careful, considered, and technically demanding — lime plaster repairs, oil paint on period joinery, historically referenced colour palettes.

New-build properties in London range from ultra-premium apartments in developments along the Thames and in Mayfair to carefully designed contemporary houses in established residential areas such as Hampstead and Richmond. While these properties arrive with a developer-applied finish, discerning buyers frequently commission a complete redecoration to achieve the colour palette, product quality, and standard of finish that a developer specification cannot provide. New-build decoration differs fundamentally from period property work: rather than managing aged surfaces and heritage features, the challenge is to achieve a truly flawless finish on modern materials, to address the inevitable snagging issues that affect even the highest-quality new construction, and to introduce warmth and character to spaces that can initially feel clinical. The clean lines and minimal detailing of contemporary architecture leave surfaces completely exposed, and any imperfection in preparation or application is immediately visible. This demands exceptional skill and an obsessive attention to detail from the decorating team.

Our Approach to Islington New Builds

Islington's housing stock is dominated by Georgian and Victorian terraces, built between approximately 1780 and 1900 across successive waves of development. The earliest and grandest properties are in Canonbury — the Canonbury Estate streets, built from the 1820s onwards, contain four and five-storey stucco and stock brick terraces with exceptionally well-preserved interiors. Barnsbury, developed slightly later, provides a more varied landscape of smaller terraces, semi-detached pairs, and garden squares. The streets around Essex Road and Highbury contain Victorian stock brick terraces from the 1850s to 1880s — less grand than Canonbury but with the same characteristic features: corniced ceilings, deep skirting boards, panelled doors, and bay windows. A significant number of properties have been converted into flats, often retaining original ceiling heights and architectural details while dividing the floor plate. Modern infill development is present but Islington Council has been relatively protective of the area's character. The mix of tenures — long-term owner-occupiers, professional renters, and a significant proportion of owner-occupiers who have renovated their properties — creates a decorating market spanning from careful heritage restoration to contemporary remodelling.

Our approach to new-build decoration begins with a comprehensive snagging survey of all painted surfaces, identifying every crack, defect, and imperfection that must be addressed before decoration. We then carry out a thorough preparation programme including filling all cracks with flexible acrylic filler, re-taping failed joints, sanding all surfaces to a smooth and even finish, and applying a high-quality primer or mist coat to ensure consistent absorption across the entire surface. For walls, we recommend Farrow & Ball Modern Emulsion or Little Greene Intelligent Emulsion, both of which provide a more refined, deeper finish than any developer-grade product. In properties where a completely seamless, spray-applied finish is desired, we use airless or HVLP spray systems to achieve a factory-smooth result on walls, ceilings, and built-in joinery. Mylands paint is an excellent choice for new-build woodwork, offering contemporary colours with a beautifully smooth eggshell finish. For bathrooms and kitchens, we use specialist moisture-resistant emulsions that will perform well in the highly sealed, low-ventilation environments typical of modern construction. We advise clients to consider a touch-up visit twelve months after initial decoration to address any new shrinkage cracks.

Heritage & Conservation

Islington has extensive conservation area coverage, reflecting the exceptional quality of its 18th and 19th century architectural heritage. The Canonbury Conservation Area, the Barnsbury Conservation Area, and the Cloudesley Estate Conservation Area together cover most of the high-quality residential streets. Within these areas, Islington Council's planning policies require a high standard of material use and craftsmanship for any works affecting the external appearance of buildings. Listed buildings are concentrated in Canonbury — several of the most complete Georgian terraces are Grade II listed, and Canonbury Tower itself is Grade II*. Interior decorating within listed buildings requires care to avoid damaging historic fabric, particularly the original lime plaster that survives in many properties. Exterior painting on listed buildings or in conservation areas requires appropriate masonry paint systems that allow the building fabric to breathe. Islington's conservation officers are engaged and attentive, and we advise clients to consult early where any uncertainty exists about consent requirements.

Our Work: New Build & Islington Projects

Project Photo
townhouse

Canonbury Georgian Terrace Full Interior Repaint

A complete interior redecoration of a four-storey Georgian terraced house in the Canonbury conservation area of Islington. The property — a classic example of the early nineteenth-century speculative development that defines north Islington's residential character — had been converted to flats in the 1970s and recently restored to single-family use. The new owners wanted a colour scheme that honoured the Georgian architecture while feeling liveable and contemporary.

Project Photo
townhouse

Four-Storey Georgian Townhouse Full Restoration — Canonbury Square

A complete interior restoration of a four-storey Grade II listed Georgian townhouse on Canonbury Square in Islington, one of north London's finest early nineteenth-century residential squares. The property had been sympathetically maintained over the decades but had never undergone a comprehensive redecoration: lime plaster walls had accumulated numerous incompatible coatings, painted joinery had lost its profile to paint build-up, and the principal-floor dado rail had been clumsily overworked. The client's brief was an authentic lime and natural paint restoration throughout, with oil paint on all period joinery and a hand-painted detail scheme on the dado rail.

Project Photo
new build

New-Build Luxury Apartment Finishing

A developer's show apartment in a prestigious new Marylebone development required a flawless decorative finish to the highest possible standard. Every surface, from internal doors to shadow-gap skirting boards, needed to be finished with precision to match the exacting specifications of the interior design team.

Own a New Build in Islington?

Get a free, bespoke decorating quote. We combine unparalleled area knowledge with specialist new build expertise.

CallWhatsAppQuote