1930s Semi-Detached roof in Clitheroe
1930s Semi-Detached · Clitheroe

1930s Semi-Detached Roofing in Clitheroe

Inter-war brick semi — bay window, clay or early concrete tile, hipped or gabled roof.

1930s Semi-Detached roofs in Clitheroe

Standard 1930s 3-bed brick semi found across Marton, Stanley Park, Fulwood, Penwortham, Cleveleys inland and Padiham fringe estates. Original roof is often clay plain tile or first-generation concrete tile, both now 80+ years old.

Typical roof construction: Clay plain tile or early concrete interlocking tile on a hipped roof, often with a small bay-window roof at the front.

Clitheroe context: Strong mix of Victorian stone villas, Georgian townhouses near the castle and rural stone farmhouses through Pendleton, Waddington and Chatburn. Natural slate and traditional clay tile are standard. Open Ribble Valley exposure — long fetch for westerly winds and notable winter frost on north-facing roofs of higher villages like Waddington.

What fails on a 1930s Semi-Detached in Clitheroe

  • Ridge tiles lifting in coastal/Pennine winds because original mortar bedding has carbonated
  • Bay-window flat-lead roofs at the front cracking after 80 years of UV cycling
  • Hip-tile slippage on the angled hips — gravity plus old mortar = a recurring storm callout
  • Inadequate loft ventilation causing winter condensation under the felt

Typical job

Most calls are ridge re-bedding + bay-window lead replacement, or full re-roof with dry-fix ridges and modern breathable underlay.

Budget guide

Full re-roof on a 1930s semi typically £5,500–£9,000 with concrete tile, £7,500–£12,000 with clay or matched plain tile.