Bathroom vinyl across Greenwich SE10/SE3
Most Greenwich bathrooms are small enough that the whole floor is a single drop of sheet vinyl — no seam means no chance of water getting underneath.
What bathroom vinyl in Greenwich actually involves
Most Greenwich bathrooms are small enough that the whole floor is a single drop of sheet vinyl — no seam means no chance of water getting underneath.
Period properties have suspended timber and lath ceilings below — no aggressive sanding.
"Coved up the wall — looks tidier than tiles for a fraction of the cost." — SE10/SE3 customer
- Single-drop sheet vinyl — no seam in a standard bathroom
- Coved 100mm up the wall on request
- Cushioned, slip-rated and warm underfoot
- Sealed around toilet pan and bath foot
Before we quote a vinyl job in Greenwich
- Sheet seams
Sheet vinyl in a typical Greenwich kitchen is usually a single drop — no seam, no water-ingress risk.
- Subfloor
On older georgian and victorian period homes we overlay with ply before laying vinyl so the boards underneath don't telegraph through.
- Coving
For bathrooms we can cove the vinyl up the wall 100mm to seal the floor properly.
Bottom line: the value waterproof finish for Greenwich bathrooms. Half-day fit, no seams.
Postcodes: SE10/SE3 · Routes: the A2 and Blackwall Tunnel approach · Common build: Georgian and Victorian period homes.
Covering Greenwich Peninsula, West Greenwich, Maze Hill.
Bathroom Vinyl jobs we've finished nearby



Bathroom Vinyl in Greenwich — common questions
Yes — cut tight and sealed with bathroom silicone. Standard in Greenwich.
Half a day usually. We lift the old floor, prep, fit and seal the same morning.
Yes — on request. Standard in Greenwich rentals and family bathrooms, 100mm up with a capping strip.
Sheet vinyl is cheaper and seamless; LVT is more premium and warmer. Both are waterproof. Rentals and kids' bathrooms usually get vinyl; refits and master bathrooms get LVT.
