
Worsthorne Roofers — Burnley
Conservation-area Pennine village on the edge of Burnley — sandstone-built terraces with natural Welsh slate, all subject to Burnley Borough Council conservation guidance.
Most Worsthorne homeowners who call us about roofing have already had a quote that doesn't quite add up. We start with a free written inspection and explain — in plain English — what your roof actually needs and what it doesn't.
Worsthorne at a glance
- Council
- Burnley Borough Council
- Postcode
- BB10
- Nearest A-road
- Long Causeway / A646
- Motorway
- M65 J10
Trade zones nearby: Heasandford Industrial Estate (2 miles).
Local anchor: the South Pennines moor edge.
Quotes that itemise every line — Worsthorne
You get a written quote broken down by element, not a single number with nothing behind it.
If your Worsthorne roofing is storm-related, get us out to make safe first and worry about the insurer second — the documentation we provide as standard usually carries the claim.
Worsthorne housing stock
Tightly packed sandstone terraces of late-Victorian origin, plus a handful of older yeoman cottages around Salus Street and Church Street. Most roofs are original Welsh slate on hand-cut battens, with stone chimney stacks shared between every second property.
Common roofing issues in Worsthorne
- Failed lime-mortar pointing on shared sandstone chimney stacks — cement repointing from previous decades is now spalling the original stone
- Slipped Welsh slates after Pennine westerly gusts above 60mph — single-tile failures cascade because nails into 120-year-old battens give way
- Lead valley failures where original lead has thinned to under code 4 — common on the rear-elevation valleys facing the moors
- Iron strap corrosion on chimney rebuilds where Victorian wrought-iron straps need replacing with stainless equivalents
Our approach in Worsthorne
Worsthorne sits inside a Burnley Borough Council conservation area, so every external roofing change has to be like-for-like. We carry matched reclaimed Welsh slate stock specifically for the village, use lime mortar matched to existing sandstone colour, and replace any structural ironwork with stainless steel during rebuilds. Conservation officers want to see a written method statement for any chimney work — we provide it as standard.
Recent Worsthorne job
Recent example: shared-stack rebuild on a Church Street terrace pair — top four courses taken down, sandstone cleaned and reset in lime mortar, new code 5 lead aprons dressed both elevations, and both households' insurers documented from one written report.
Streets we work on regularly
- Church Street
- Salus Street
- Ormerod Road
- Smith Street
- Long Causeway
Most-requested services in Worsthorne
All services in Worsthorne
Need a roofer in Worsthorne?
Free inspection, honest written quote, no pressure.
