
Victorian Terrace Roofing in Lytham
Stone-built Victorian terrace — shared chimney stacks, original Welsh slate, hand-cut battens.
Victorian Terrace roofs in Lytham
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.
Lytham context: Substantial Victorian and Edwardian villas, large 1930s detached homes around Ansdell, and a high proportion of natural slate and clay tile roofs. Many properties fall within Fylde's conservation areas. Coastal exposure is real but more sheltered than Blackpool — softened by the Ribble Estuary. Salt corrosion and wind-driven rain are still the main concerns.
What fails on a Victorian Terrace in Lytham
- 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.
Full re-roof on a 2-up-2-down terrace typically lands £6,500–£10,500 including scaffolding and matched reclaimed slate.
