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Service Region — Cotswolds & West Country

Forty years. Two hundred buildings.
Every stone accounted for.

Specialist lime mortar and stone restoration for Grade I, II*, and II listed buildings. Hover a pin to see the work.

Completed restoration project·6 projects shown

The diagnostic approach

We survey before we specify. Every repair begins with understanding why the stone failed — not just where.

Close-up of deteriorated stone masonry with failed pointing and deep cracks in mortar joints
Before
Freshly repointed ashlar stonework with clean, uniform lime mortar joints on a historic church facade
After
Hover to reveal
Hartley Hall, Bath2021
Ashlar Repointing

The joint that looked fine from the road

Diagnosis

Hairline cracking through the bed joints had allowed seventeen years of water ingress behind a Bath stone parapet. The original lime mortar had carbonated and shrunk away from the arrises. By the time we surveyed it, the inner leaf was saturated and beginning to delaminate.

Treatment

Full raking of failed joints to 25mm depth, followed by NHL 3.5 repointing in two coats — scratch and finish — using a mix matched to the original carbonated lime analysis. Joint profile: flush struck, tooled back with a charger.

NHL 3.5Flush struckArrisesCarbonation
Sandstone church exterior showing biological growth, black staining and spalling stone surface
Before
Restored church exterior with clean golden sandstone and crisp repointed joints after conservation work
After
Hover to reveal
St. Mary's Church, Painswick2019
Stone Indenting

Where Portland met the original Bath stone

Diagnosis

A mid-century repair had introduced Portland cement patches into a Bath stone façade — a colour mismatch visible at 40 metres. The harder cement was causing compressive stress fractures in the adjacent original stone, concentrating moisture and accelerating the very decay it was meant to arrest.

Treatment

Removal of all cement patches. Type A indenting in matching Bath stone sourced from Hartham Park. Indents pinned with stainless 316 dowels in NHL grout, joints pointed in lime putty mortar to match the original bed depth of 8mm.

Type A indentingHartham Park stoneLime puttyStainless 316
Historic manor house exterior with water-damaged render, staining and failing mortar on Georgian facade
Before
Fully restored Georgian manor facade with clean lime render and sharp architectural detailing
After
Hover to reveal
Fairford Manor, Gloucestershire2020
Shelter Coat

Sandstone that had forgotten what dry felt like

Diagnosis

Friable Cotswold limestone on the north elevation had absorbed water through failed pointing and a missing lead apron. The outer face had spalled back 12–18mm across an area of approximately 40m². The stone was still structurally sound but the surface was open to further frost action.

Treatment

Consolidant injection with Wacker BS45 into the most friable zones. Two coats of sacrificial shelter coat — a hot lime and aggregate mix applied by brush — to protect the surface through a minimum of two winter cycles before assessment for final repointing.

Shelter coatWacker BS45Hot limeFrost action
0+
Years practice
Est. 1984
0+
Listed buildings
Grade I, II*, II
0%
Client retention
Estate & church clients
0
Conservation officers
Active relationships

Recognised by the bodies that matter to listed building work.

RICS AccreditedHistoric England Approved ContractorSPAB MemberEcclesiastical Architects & Surveyors AssociationTraditional Building Skills Register

Selected restorations

Each project begins with a measured survey. Each specification is written for the building, not the budget.

Medieval church with Cotswold stone tower and newly repointed ashlar masonry against blue sky
Grade I
Ecclesiastical
St. Mary's Church
Painswick2019
Ashlar repointing, flying buttress consolidation
Georgian Bath stone facade with clean white mortar joints and symmetrical sash windows
Grade II*
Residential
Hartley Hall
Bath2021
NHL 3.5 repointing, Bath stone indenting
Victorian civic building with restored golden sandstone facade and ornate carved details
Grade II
Civic
The Old Sessions House
Gloucester2022
Sandstone cleaning, hydraulic lime rebed
Norman church tower with fresh lime wash and restored stone pinnacles against evening sky
Grade I
Ecclesiastical
All Saints Church
Cirencester2023
Pinnacle consolidation, lime wash, lead flashing
Wide-angle view of Cotswold manor house with freshly repointed limestone walls and formal garden
Grade II
Residential
Tetbury Court
Tetbury2024
Ashlar joint raking, lime putty repointing

Viewing 5 of 200+ completed projects.

Technical Resource

Our Specification Guide
for Lime Mortar Repairs

Forty pages covering mortar analysis, NHL selection, joint profiles, and Conservation Area compliance. Written for conservation officers, architects, and estate managers specifying repair works.

Mortar sample analysis methodology
NHL 2 / 3.5 / 5 selection criteria
Joint profiles: flush, weatherstruck, recessed
Shelter coat and consolidant specifications
Historic England compliance checklist
PDF Download
40 pages · Free

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03Visible Damage

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