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Belgravia Painters& Decorators

W11 · W2

Period Conversion Painters & Decorators in Notting Hill

Specialist period conversion painting and decorating in Notting Hill. Expert tradesmen blending traditional techniques with modern durability.

Decorating Period Conversion Properties in Notting Hill

Notting Hill's reputation as London's most colourful neighbourhood is literally painted onto its architecture. The famous pastel-hued stuccoed houses of Lancaster Road, Elgin Crescent, and Westbourne Park Road are among the most photographed residential streets in the world, and maintaining these distinctive colour schemes requires both skill and sensitivity to the area's evolving aesthetic. Unlike the uniform cream stucco of Belgravia, Notting Hill's palette is varied and individual — soft pinks, powder blues, mint greens, and butter yellows create a streetscape that has become an integral part of the area's identity and commercial appeal. Our work in Notting Hill extends beyond these Instagram-famous facades to the substantial family houses on Ladbroke Grove and Clarendon Road, where five-storey stuccoed terraces rival anything in Kensington for scale and grandeur. The communal gardens of the Ladbroke Estate — a unique arrangement of private gardens shared between the houses surrounding them — create an extraordinary residential environment where maintaining the visual harmony of the surrounding facades is a collective responsibility managed through garden committees. Portobello Road itself and the streets around it present a more eclectic mix: Victorian shopfronts with decorative signwriting, converted industrial spaces, and modern infill developments all requiring different decorating approaches.

Period conversions encompass a wide range of London properties where historic buildings have been divided into individual residential units. These include Georgian and Victorian townhouses subdivided into flats, converted schools and churches, former warehouses, and repurposed commercial buildings. What unites them is the interplay between original architectural features and the modern interventions required to create comfortable contemporary homes. A converted first-floor flat in a Kensington townhouse might retain original cornicing and a marble fireplace alongside a newly inserted kitchen and bathroom, while a Battersea warehouse conversion might pair exposed brick and cast-iron columns with sleek modern partitions. Decorating these properties requires the ability to move fluently between heritage and contemporary approaches, often within the same room. Understanding which features to celebrate and which modern insertions to integrate seamlessly is central to achieving a successful result. The variety of surface types encountered in period conversions, from lime plaster and exposed timber to modern plasterboard and steel, demands a versatile approach to preparation and product selection.

Our Approach to Notting Hill Period Conversions

Notting Hill's housing ranges from the grandest early Victorian stuccoed terraces to modest mid-Victorian cottages, with substantial modern development alongside. The houses around Ladbroke Square and Stanley Crescent are among the most impressive in west London — tall, deeply moulded stucco facades with Corinthian pilasters, heavy cornices, and first-floor balconies running the full width of the house. Lansdowne Road and Lansdowne Crescent contain similarly grand properties arranged around the communal gardens. Further north towards Westbourne Park, the scale reduces to three-storey terraces that have been extensively converted into flats, with the characteristic Notting Hill treatment of brightly painted stucco. Pembridge Square and Pembridge Crescent offer mansion blocks and large converted houses in the area closest to Notting Hill Gate. The Portobello Road area includes commercial conversions and loft apartments above the market shops, creating unusual spaces that require creative decorating solutions.

Our approach to period conversions begins with a careful assessment of all surface types present in the property, followed by a tailored preparation strategy for each. Original lime plaster walls benefit from breathable paint systems such as Edward Bulmer Natural Paint or Little Greene traditional oil-based primers, which allow moisture to move through the wall structure without causing paint failure. Modern plasterboard sections are treated with appropriate acrylic primers before decoration. For properties where heritage and contemporary elements coexist, we often recommend a unified colour palette using Farrow & Ball or Little Greene ranges, which offer colours sophisticated enough to complement period features while feeling fresh and current in modern spaces. Where original mouldings have been painted over many times, we can arrange careful paint stripping using infrared or chemical methods to restore crisp detail before repainting. For warehouse and industrial conversions, we use specialist coatings for exposed metalwork and brick sealers that preserve the raw character of these materials while protecting them from dust and degradation. The key is always to let the unique character of the building guide the decorating approach.

Heritage & Conservation

The Ladbroke Conservation Area covers much of Notting Hill and is one of the most significant in the borough. While Notting Hill is known for its colourful facades, this does not mean anything goes — RBKC conservation area policy requires that new paint colours maintain the area's established character, and a formal application may be needed for significant colour changes. The Ladbroke Estate's garden committees also exercise influence over exterior colours of properties around their gardens, though enforcement varies. Article 4 directions apply throughout the conservation area. Individually listed buildings include several on Ladbroke Grove and around the communal garden squares. The area's heritage as a 19th-century speculative development means that many properties share design elements — identical cornicing profiles, matching pilaster designs — that should be maintained during restoration. Historic paint analysis can reveal original colour schemes that may differ significantly from current fashions.

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