Victorian Terrace roof in Burnley
Victorian Terrace · Burnley

Victorian Terrace Roofing in Burnley

Stone-built Victorian terrace — shared chimney stacks, original Welsh slate, hand-cut battens.

Victorian Terrace roofs in Burnley

Late-19th century stone or brick terrace, typically two storeys with rear-yard outhouses. Almost universal across Burnley, Nelson, Padiham, Brierfield and Accrington. The roof is usually original Welsh slate that's now 110–140 years old.

Typical roof construction: Original Welsh slate on hand-cut softwood battens, with code 4 lead valleys and shared sandstone chimney stacks.

Burnley context: Predominantly Victorian and Edwardian stone-built terraces with natural slate roofs, plus 1930s semis through to modern estates around Rose Hill and Brunshaw. Many original slate roofs are now reaching the end of their life. Sits in the Calder Valley — driving rain off the Pennines and strong westerly wind exposure, especially on properties above 150m elevation.

What fails on a Victorian Terrace in Burnley

  • Nail-sickness — iron nails into 100+ year old battens corrode and slates start slipping in clusters
  • Failed lime pointing on shared chimney stacks (cement repointing from the 70s now spalling the stone)
  • Lead valleys thinning below code 4 — typical failure point on rear elevations
  • Sagging ridge line where original ridge battens have rotted at the gable ends

Typical job

Most Victorian-terrace work is either a chimney rebuild + flashing renewal, or a full strip-and-recover with reclaimed Welsh slate.

Budget guide

Full re-roof on a 2-up-2-down terrace typically lands £6,500–£10,500 including scaffolding and matched reclaimed slate.