Parking & permits
We sort visitor or trade permits and time deliveries around restricted bays and one-way streets.
A premium bathroom fit in a dense, characterful city takes more than good tiling — it takes planning around parking, access and tight period footprints. We handle the logistics so your Brighton bathroom is fitted cleanly and finished with care.
Brighton is a brilliant place to live and a genuinely tricky place to run a bathroom job. Between the Victorian terraces of Hanover and Round Hill, the bay-fronted houses around Seven Dials and Preston Park, the seafront flat conversions and the steep hillside streets, almost every property comes with its own access puzzle. We see that not as an excuse for a rough job, but as the part of the work that has to be planned properly before anyone lifts a tile.
As a Worthing-based firm working east along the coast through Shoreham-by-Sea and Hove, we know how different a Brighton bathroom is from a roomy suburban one. The footprints are smaller, the streets are tighter, and the style tends to be bolder. The goal stays the same — a bathroom that's planned properly, fitted cleanly, and finished with care — but how we get there is built around the city it's in.
The North Laine and The Lanes, the one-way grid around Kemptown, permit-only residents' bays and narrow hillside terraces all mean parking and access genuinely affect a bathroom job. We plan the practical side first: where the van loads and unloads, whether a visitor or trade parking permit is needed, how materials and waste move through the building, and how we protect a shared hallway or stair in a converted house.
For upper-floor flats that means agreeing carry routes in advance, protecting communal floors and decorating, and breaking deliveries into manageable runs rather than blocking a stairwell. Dust boards, floor protection and a clean, contained working area are standard — not because the job is messy, but because in a shared building your neighbours are part of the equation too.
We sort visitor or trade permits and time deliveries around restricted bays and one-way streets.
Carry routes for upper-floor flats and conversions are planned before work begins, not improvised.
Communal hallways, stairs and landings are boarded and covered so the only room that changes is yours.
Dust control and daily tidy-down keep disruption low in a busy building on a busy street.
A quality fit, despite the city — tight streets, tight staircases, no excuses.
Terraced and basement-flat bathrooms in Brighton are often small, awkwardly shaped, or tucked under a stair. The answer is rarely to cram more in — it's to plan the layout so the space breathes. Wall-hung basins and WCs free up floor and visually open the room, recessed niches replace bulky shelving, and a single large-format tile run reads as one continuous surface rather than a busy grid.
We think hard about sightlines, door swings and where a shower screen sits, because in a tight room those details decide whether it feels generous or cramped. A walk-in shower or wet room often suits a small footprint better than an enclosure, and a well-judged ensuite or cloakroom can be carved out of surprisingly little. Before any work starts you can preview finishes with our 3D concept generator, so the plan is settled while it's still cheap to change.
Brighton homes carry their character openly, and bathrooms here can take more personality than most. Bold patterned floors, deep colour on the walls, characterful encaustic-look or zellige-style tiling and statement brassware all suit the city's eclectic mix — and done properly they lift resale and rental appeal rather than dating quickly. We're happy to design something with confidence; the craft underneath keeps it looking considered rather than chaotic.
For landlords and investors across Kemptown, Hanover and the seafront conversions, the brief is different: durable, low-maintenance and easy to turn around between tenants, but still considered enough to let or sell well. We spec hard-wearing surfaces, robust fittings and sensible layouts that stand up to heavy use without looking like a budget job. Whether it's a single let or a full bathroom installation across a converted house, the same planning and finish standards apply.
Front-line seafront properties deal with damp and salt air more than most, so on those jobs we pay particular attention to ventilation, sealing and moisture-tolerant materials — the unseen work that keeps a beautiful room from suffering behind the scenes. A full bathroom renovation is the right moment to put that right properly.
We plan it before we start. That means arranging any visitor or trade parking permit for residents' bays, timing deliveries around narrow one-way streets, and agreeing exactly how materials and waste move in and out — including hillside access and upper-floor flats. The aim is for the logistics to be sorted on paper so the day-to-day runs smoothly.
Yes — that's a core part of this service. Wall-hung fittings, recessed niches, large-format tiling and a layout planned around sightlines and door swings can make a tight terraced or basement bathroom feel noticeably more open without changing the footprint.
We do. We plan carry routes in advance, protect communal hallways and stairs, and break deliveries into manageable runs so we're not blocking a shared stairwell. Converted houses and upper-floor flats are exactly the kind of access we plan for in the city.
Absolutely. Brighton homes suit personality — patterned floors, deep colour, characterful tiling and statement brassware. We're happy to design something with confidence, and the craft underneath keeps it looking considered and built to last.
Yes. For lets and HMOs we spec hard-wearing, low-maintenance surfaces and robust fittings that are easy to turn around between tenants — while still looking considered enough to let or sell well rather than like a budget job.
We work in a contained, protected area with dust boards and floor coverings, keep shared hallways and stairs covered, tidy down each day, and plan deliveries to avoid blocking the street or stairwell. The idea is that the only room that changes is yours.
We open for bookings in June 2027 — register your interest now, and founding clients get first pick of the calendar.