Building Consent for Renovations in Auckland — NZ Guide
Building Consent for Renovations in Auckland — The Complete NZ Guide
Quick answer: Building consent is required for any Auckland renovation involving structural changes, new plumbing or drainage, extensions, recladding, or garage conversions. Cosmetic work — painting, replacing fixtures in the same location, minor repairs — is typically exempt under Schedule 1 of the Building Act 2004. Fines for unconsented work can reach $200,000.
You’ve finally decided to renovate. The Pinterest boards are full, the budget’s roughly sorted, and you’re ready to talk to a builder. Then someone mentions building consent and the whole thing starts to feel like homework.
We get it. Auckland Council’s website isn’t exactly light reading, and the rules around what needs consent and what doesn’t catch a lot of homeowners off guard. We’ve seen clients in Grey Lynn assume their open-plan kitchen conversion was a simple cosmetic job — only to discover the wall they wanted gone was load-bearing. That’s a consent job. And it changes the timeline, the budget, and the team you’ll need on site.
The rules aren’t complicated once you understand the logic behind them. Anything that affects your home’s structure, weathertightness, fire safety, or plumbing and drainage almost always needs consent. Anything that’s purely cosmetic — new paint, replacing a vanity in the same spot, swapping out a benchtop — usually doesn’t.
This guide breaks down exactly which Auckland renovations need building consent, how to get your documents sorted, what the process looks like from start to finish, and what to expect for common projects like extensions, recladding, load-bearing wall removals, and garage conversions. We’ve written it based on what we actually see in our projects — not what a textbook says should happen.
At Superior Renovations, we handle consent-required and non-consent renovations across Auckland every week. Our showroom is at 16B Link Drive, Wairau Valley, and we work closely with Sonder Architecture for all consent-related design work. If consent feels like a grey area for your project, we can usually tell you within a single conversation whether you’ll need it or not.
Architectural drawings are the foundation of every consent-required renovation — Superior Renovations
Building Consent vs Resource Consent — What Auckland Homeowners Actually Need to Know
These two get confused constantly. They’re separate approvals, governed by separate laws, and you might need one, both, or neither depending on what you’re doing.
What Is Building Consent?
A building consent is Auckland Council’s written approval confirming that your proposed building work meets the New Zealand Building Code. It covers the structural integrity, fire safety, weathertightness, plumbing, drainage, and energy performance of your home. The Building Act 2004 governs the entire framework.
You need building consent when your renovation changes the way the building performs — structurally, thermally, or in terms of moisture and fire. That’s the test. A new coat of paint doesn’t change how the building performs. Knocking out a load-bearing wall does.
💡 Quick tip: If you’re unsure whether your project needs consent, call Auckland Council on 09 301 0101 before starting any work. Getting it wrong can cost you up to $200,000 in fines under the Building Act 2004.
What Is Resource Consent?
A resource consent deals with how your project affects the environment and your neighbours. It’s governed by the Resource Management Act 1991 and managed separately by Auckland Council’s planning team. You’ll typically need resource consent if your extension pushes past height-in-relation-to-boundary rules, exceeds site coverage limits in your zone, or involves clearing protected vegetation.
Here’s where it gets real for Auckland homeowners: a second-storey extension in Epsom might need building consent for the structural work and resource consent because of shading effects on the neighbour’s property. Two separate applications, two separate fees, two separate timelines.
The Key Difference at a Glance
| 建筑许可 | 资源同意书 | |
|---|---|---|
| Governed by | Building Act 2004 | Resource Management Act 1991 |
| What it checks | Structure, fire, plumbing, weathertightness, energy | Environmental effects, zoning, boundaries, neighbours |
| Common triggers | Extensions, load-bearing walls, new plumbing, recladding | Height breaches, site coverage, tree removal, subdivision |
| Processing time | 20 working days (statutory) | 20–60+ working days depending on notification |
“A lot of Auckland homeowners assume building consent and resource consent are the same thing. They’re not, and mixing them up can delay your project by months. We always check both requirements at the feasibility stage so there are no surprises once you’re ready to build.”
— Dorothy Li, Design Manager, Superior Renovations
Important note for 2026: The New Zealand Government announced major consenting reforms in December 2025, aiming to reduce up to 46% of consent applications nationwide by 2029. Under the proposed changes, homeowners generally won’t need resource consent for work that only affects their own property — things like decks, garages, and interior layout changes. These reforms aren’t active yet, but they’re worth watching. For now, the current rules still apply.
Which Auckland Renovations Need Building Consent — And Which Are Exempt?
This is the question we hear most. The answer comes down to Schedule 1 of the Building Act 2004, which lists specific types of low-risk work that are exempt from requiring a consent. Everything else needs one.
Renovations That Typically Need Building Consent
If your renovation touches the structure, changes the plumbing layout, or alters the building envelope, you almost certainly need consent. Here’s what that looks like in practice across Auckland projects:
| Renovation Type | Consent Needed? | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Removing a load-bearing wall | 是 | Structural change — requires engineer-designed beam |
| House extension (single or second storey) | 是 | New structure, foundations, connection to existing building |
| Recladding | 是 | Affects building envelope and weathertightness |
| Converting a garage to a dwelling | 是 | Change of use — insulation, plumbing, fire safety required |
| Adding a toilet where none existed | 是 | New waste pipes and drainage connections |
| Moving plumbing to a new location | 是 | Drainage and sanitary fixture changes |
| Adding windows or altering exterior openings | 是 | Weathertightness and structural framing affected |
| Decks more than 1.5m above ground | 是 | Height creates structural and safety risk |
| Retaining walls over 1.5m | 是 | Structural load from retained earth |
Renovations That Are Typically Exempt (No Consent Required)
Schedule 1 exemptions cover low-risk building work. The critical thing to understand: even exempt work must still comply with the Building Code. You don’t need permission to do it, but you still need to do it properly.
Common exempt renovations include replacing a sink, toilet, or vanity in the same location (like-for-like), repainting and wallpapering, replacing kitchen cabinetry without moving plumbing, swapping taps or repairing plumbing when done by a registered plumber, replacing flooring without altering the substrate, and installing a garden shed under 10m².
💡 Quick tip: MBIE’s free online tool at canibuildit.govt.nz lets you check whether your specific project needs consent. It takes about five minutes and it’s worth doing before you commit to a timeline.
The Granny Flat Exemption — New for 2026
From January 2026, a new Schedule 1A exemption allows standalone dwellings up to 70m² to be built without building consent. This is a significant change from the previous 30m² limit for structures without sanitary facilities. The new exemption includes dwellings with kitchen and bathroom facilities, provided they meet specific conditions — including being standalone, new construction (not an alteration), and complying with the Building Code.
If you’ve been thinking about a granny flat or minor dwelling on your Auckland section, this is a game-changer. But the conditions are strict, and non-compliance triggers enforcement action. Talk to your builder or architect before assuming your project qualifies.
Read more: What renovations do not require building consent in Auckland?
Property Files and LIM Reports — Getting Your Documents Sorted Before You Start
If your renovation needs consent, you’ll need documents from Auckland Council before your architect can draw a single line. Two documents come up repeatedly: the property file and the LIM report. They’re not the same thing, and understanding the difference will save you time and money.
What Is a Property File?
A property file is the council’s detailed record of everything that’s been built, consented, and inspected on your property. It includes previous building consent documents, architectural drawings, inspection reports, Code Compliance Certificates, structural measurements, and the location of council pipes running under and around your home.
Your architect needs this. Full stop. Without the property file, they can’t see what’s been built before, where the council drainage runs, or whether previous work was consented and signed off. For any consent-related renovation — extensions, recladding, garage conversions, load-bearing wall removals — the property file is the starting point.
We had a client in Albany a couple of years ago who wanted to extend their kitchen into the garage. When the architect reviewed the property file, it turned out the garage itself had never been consented properly — built by a previous owner without approval. That discovery changed the entire scope. Without the property file, they wouldn’t have known until they were mid-build.
💡 Quick tip: Only the property owner can request a property file from Auckland Council. You can do it online at Auckland Council’s online services portal or walk into a council service centre. Request it early — it can take a few days to arrive, and your architect will need it before they can start.
What Is a LIM Report?
A LIM (Land Information Memorandum) is a broader overview of your property. It covers zoning, flood risk, erosion risk, stormwater and sewage drain locations, and a summary of any consented work — but it doesn’t include the detailed plans and measurements an architect needs for consent work.
You’ll usually get a LIM when you buy a property. It’s useful for understanding what you’re working with at a high level — whether the property sits in a flood zone, whether there are heritage overlays, or whether any council warnings are attached. But it’s not a substitute for the property file when it comes to actual building work.
Property File vs LIM — Side by Side
| Property File | LIM Report | |
|---|---|---|
| Contains | Detailed plans, measurements, consent records, pipe locations, inspection history | Zoning, flood/erosion risk, drain locations (rough), consent summary |
| Used for | Architectural drawings, consent applications, feasibility | Property purchase due diligence, high-level risk assessment |
| Needed for consent? | Yes — essential for all consent work | Not required, but useful context |
| Who requests it | Property owner only | Anyone (usually buyer’s solicitor) |
How the Building Consent Process Works in Auckland — Step by Step
The consent process has a reputation for being slow and confusing. It doesn’t have to be. If you get the documents right upfront and work with an architect who knows the Auckland Council system, the whole thing runs in a fairly predictable sequence.
The Process for Non-Consent Renovations (Bathrooms, Kitchens, Cosmetic Work)
When your renovation doesn’t require consent — a bathroom renovation that keeps plumbing in the same locations, or a kitchen renovation without structural changes — the process is more straightforward:
We arrange an on-site visit to measure the space, discuss design ideas, and talk budget. Within four working days you’ll receive a proposal with concept designs, a detailed scope of works, and a fixed quote. If you accept, we schedule the project, finalise the design, and take you through our supplier showrooms to choose your fittings and finishes. Then we build it. Your project manager handles every trade, every delivery, and every update along the way.
The Process for Consent-Required Renovations
For extensions, recladding, garage conversions, load-bearing wall removals, or any work that triggers consent, the process adds an architect and a council approval stage. Here’s how it works when you renovate with us:
Step 1 — Initial enquiry and architect referral. Once we understand your project, we’ll introduce you to our partnered architects at Sonder Architecture, whose head office sits alongside our showroom in Wairau Valley. You’re also welcome to use your own architect.
Step 2 — Property file and feasibility. Your architect will request your property file (you’ll need to apply for this from Auckland Council). They’ll review it alongside your goals and produce a feasibility assessment — what’s possible, what constraints exist, rough costs for architectural drawings, and potential council fees.
Step 3 — On-site visit and concept design. If the feasibility stacks up, the architect visits your property to take measurements and develop concept drawings. These give you a visual sense of the proposed changes before committing to detailed plans.
Step 4 — Architectural drawings and consent lodgement. Once you approve the concept, the architect produces detailed architectural drawings — floor plans, elevations, sections, and specifications that comply with the NZ Building Code. These drawings, along with supporting documentation (engineering calculations, drainage plans), are submitted to Auckland Council for building consent.
Step 5 — Council assessment (20 working days). Auckland Council has a statutory 20 working days to assess your application. They may request further information (RFIs), which pauses the clock. Complete, accurate submissions avoid RFIs — this is where an experienced architect pays for themselves.
Step 6 — Consent granted, renovation quoted and scheduled. Once consent is issued, our renovation consultant reviews the approved plans, conducts an on-site visit, and produces a fixed quote covering design, all building materials, labour, trades, and full project management. We take you to our supplier showrooms to choose fittings while we get our teams organised.
Step 7 — Build, inspect, and sign off. Construction begins. Auckland Council inspects at key stages — foundations, pre-line (framing and services), and final. After the final inspection passes, the council issues a Code Compliance Certificate (CCC), confirming the work meets the Building Code.
💡 Quick tip: Keep your CCC safe. You’ll need it when you sell the property — buyers and their solicitors will check for it, and missing CCCs create complications. If previous owners did consented work but never obtained the CCC, you may need to apply for a Certificate of Acceptance, which costs more and takes longer.
“The single biggest mistake we see is homeowners starting work before consent is granted. It’s not just illegal — it creates real problems during inspections and can cost you thousands to fix. Patience at the consent stage saves money during the build.”
— Alison Yu, Designer, Superior Renovations
What Does Building Consent Cost in Auckland?
Auckland Council charges are deposit-based and reconciled against actual processing and inspection time. The fees depend on your project’s value and complexity. As a rough guide for residential renovations:
| Project Type | Indicative Consent Cost (incl. inspections) |
|---|---|
| Minor renovation consent (e.g. adding a toilet) | $400–$1,500 |
| Load-bearing wall removal | $1,000–$2,500 |
| Garage conversion | $1,500–$3,000 |
| House extension | $2,500–$5,000+ |
| Full recladding | $2,000–$4,000+ |
Note: These figures are indicative. Auckland Council’s fees are updated annually — check their current fee schedule for the latest charges. All fees include GST.
Common Consent-Required Renovations — What to Expect for Each
Every consent-required renovation follows the same general process, but the details change depending on the type of work. Here’s what to expect for the most common projects we handle across Auckland.
Removing a Load-Bearing Wall
This is one of the most common consent triggers in Auckland renovations — especially when homeowners want to open up their living areas. In older villas and bungalows across Grey Lynn, Ponsonby, and Mt Eden, almost every internal wall running perpendicular to the roof line is load-bearing.
You can’t just knock it down and hope for the best. The process requires a structural engineer or architect to design a replacement beam (usually a steel LVL or universal beam) that redistributes the load. That design gets submitted to council as part of your consent application.
During the build, temporary props support the structure while the wall comes out and the permanent beam goes in. Council inspects the beam installation before the ceiling is closed up — this is the pre-line inspection, and you can’t skip it. Once it passes, the gib goes on and you’ve got your open-plan living space.
A client in Hillsborough wanted to connect their kitchen and dining room. The dividing wall was load-bearing. The engineer designed a 4.8m steel beam, the consent took about three weeks, and the beam install itself was done in two days. Total time from enquiry to open space: roughly eight weeks including the consent processing.
💡 Quick tip: Not sure if a wall is load-bearing? Knock on it. Load-bearing walls produce a dull thud — they’re solid and typically thicker than 90mm. Partition walls sound hollow. But always get a professional assessment before making any decisions. Getting it wrong is not a DIY risk worth taking.
房屋扩建
Extensions always need building consent — and you can’t get a fixed quote without architectural drawings. This trips up a lot of Auckland homeowners who expect a builder to visit, measure up, and produce a price on the spot. It doesn’t work that way for extensions, and any builder who says otherwise should raise a red flag.
The architect needs the property file to understand what’s already there — previous plans, council pipe locations, and any constraints. They’ll produce drawings showing how the new structure connects to the existing one, covering foundations, framing, roofing, weathertightness, and services connections.
For single-storey extensions, you’re typically looking at $2,000–$5,500 per square metre depending on spec and complexity. Second-storey additions cost more because of the structural engineering involved in supporting the new level on the existing foundations. Use our house extension cost calculator to get a rough sense of budget before you start.
Auckland Council may also require resource consent for extensions — particularly in established suburbs where height-in-relation-to-boundary, site coverage, or daylight rules come into play. Your architect will flag this during the feasibility stage.
Read more: House extensions in Auckland — what you need to know
Recladding
Auckland has a particular relationship with recladding. The leaky building crisis — largely caused by homes built between the mid-1990s and early 2000s with monolithic cladding systems that weren’t properly weatherproofed — left thousands of Auckland homes needing remediation. If you own one of these homes in areas like Albany, Hobsonville, or parts of the North Shore, recladding might not be optional.
Recladding always needs building consent because it affects the building envelope — the primary barrier between the inside of your home and the weather outside. The process involves removing the existing cladding, assessing and repairing the underlying framing (often damaged by moisture), upgrading insulation, and installing new cladding with a proper cavity system.
Common recladding materials in New Zealand include weatherboard (timber or fibre cement), brick veneer, Shadowclad plywood, and metal cladding like Colorsteel. Your architect will help select the right material based on your home’s design, location, exposure, and budget.
Use our recladding cost calculator for an initial estimate.
Garage Conversions
Converting a garage into a liveable space — a bedroom, office, or minor dwelling — needs consent because it’s a change of use. A garage isn’t built to the same standard as a habitable room: it lacks insulation, proper ventilation, waterproofing, and the plumbing infrastructure needed for a kitchen or bathroom.
The architect needs your property file to understand the terrain beneath the garage and where council pipes run. This matters because new waste pipes need to connect to the council’s drainage network, and the route those pipes take depends on what’s already underground.
Our process for garage conversions follows the same consent pathway: initial discussion, architect referral, property file review, feasibility assessment, architectural drawings, consent lodgement, and then a fixed quote once the drawings are approved.
Read more: Full guide to converting your garage to a granny flat
Adding a Toilet or Second Bathroom
Adding a toilet where one didn’t exist before requires consent because you’re creating new waste pipe connections. This isn’t a simple plumbing job — it involves routing new drainage from the toilet location to the council’s wastewater network, and the pipe layout needs to be designed by an architect and approved by council.
If you’re simply replacing an existing toilet in the same position, that’s typically exempt. But moving it to a new location, or adding a second toilet elsewhere in the house, triggers consent. The same applies to adding a fully tiled wet-area shower — the waterproofing requirements under Clause E3 of the Building Code make this a consent-level job.
“Homeowners are often surprised that adding a toilet needs architectural drawings and consent. But when you think about it, you’re cutting into the floor, routing new waste pipes, and connecting to the council network — that’s not something you want done without proper design and inspection.”
— Cici Zou, Designer (NZ Dip. Interior Design, Certified Designer), Superior Renovations
Working With an Architect — Why It Matters and What to Expect
A lot of homeowners see the architect as an extra cost. For consent-required renovations, the architect isn’t optional — they’re the person who makes the entire project possible. Without architectural drawings, you can’t apply for consent. Without consent, you can’t legally build.
Concept Designs vs Architectural Drawings
These serve different purposes at different stages. Concept designs are the early-stage visuals — sketches, 3D renders, mood boards — that capture the overall direction before you commit to detailed plans. They’re flexible and relatively quick to produce. They let you explore options and give feedback before the expensive drawing work begins.
Architectural drawings are the technical documents. Floor plans, elevations, cross-sections, structural details, material specifications — everything the council needs to assess your project against the Building Code. These are what get submitted for consent. They’re precise, they’re detailed, and they take time to produce properly.
Think of it this way: concept designs are the conversation. Architectural drawings are the contract.
How We Work With Architects at Superior Renovations
We’re partnered with Sonder Architecture for all our consent-related work. Their head office is in our showroom at 16B Link Drive, Wairau Valley — which makes coordination between the design team, the architect, and the build team straightforward.
Here’s what the process looks like when you come to us with a consent-related project:
You fill in an enquiry form or call us. We have an initial conversation to understand what you’re trying to achieve. We then introduce you to Sonder’s architect, who will request your property file and carry out a feasibility assessment. If the numbers and the design work for you, the architect produces the drawings, submits them to council, and handles any RFIs. Once consent is granted, our renovation consultant reviews the approved plans and produces a fixed-price quote — covering everything from design to handover.
You’re also welcome to use your own architect. We work with external architects regularly. As long as the drawings meet council requirements, the process from our end is the same.
💡 Quick tip: Get a renovation architect, not a new-build architect. Renovation architects specialise in working with existing structures — they understand the quirks of older Auckland homes and know how to blend new work with what’s already there. It makes a real difference to the design quality and the consent process.
If you’re considering a consent-related project but aren’t sure where to start, we now offer a free feasibility report — a remote assessment of your project’s compliance needs, potential costs, and challenges before you invest in architectural drawings.
What Happens If You Don’t Get Consent?
We’ll be direct. Skipping consent when it’s required is illegal, expensive, and creates problems that follow the property — not just the person who did the work.
Fines for carrying out unconsented building work can reach $200,000 under the Building Act 2004. If the work continues after a notice is issued, you face an additional $10,000 per day. Auckland Council can issue stop-work orders, and the work may need to be demolished and redone.
Even if the council doesn’t catch it during construction, unconsented work shows up when you sell. Buyers’ solicitors check the property file against what’s actually built. If they find an extension, a converted garage, or plumbing work that was never consented, it creates a legal issue. You’ll likely need to apply for a Certificate of Acceptance — which is more expensive than getting consent in the first place and requires proving the work meets the Building Code after the fact.
We’ve seen this play out with clients buying homes across Auckland. The 1970s brick-and-tile in Manurewa with a “bathroom” added in the garage. The villa in Devonport where a load-bearing wall was removed without consent twenty years ago. These things cost real money to resolve, and the seller usually takes the hit during negotiations.
Sound familiar? Get it sorted. It’s always cheaper to do it right the first time.
➡ Book your free in-home consultation with Superior Renovations
➡ Request a free feasibility report for your consent-related project
➡ Use our renovation cost calculators to estimate your project budget
Do I need building consent to renovate my bathroom in Auckland?
It depends on the scope. Replacing a vanity, toilet, or taps in the same location is typically exempt under Schedule 1. But if you're moving plumbing, adding a toilet where none existed, or installing a fully tiled wet-area shower, you'll need building consent. Structural changes like removing a wall between the bathroom and bedroom also trigger consent. When in doubt, check with Auckland Council on 09 301 0101.
Do I need building consent to renovate my kitchen in Auckland?
Not for cosmetic updates like replacing cabinetry, benchtops, or appliances in the same positions. But if you're removing a load-bearing wall to create open-plan living, relocating the sink or dishwasher, or making structural changes, you'll need consent. Auckland Council's building team can confirm whether your specific project qualifies.
How much does building consent cost in Auckland?
Auckland Council charges are deposit-based and vary by project value. Minor renovation consents start around $400–$1,500. Extensions and recladding consents can run $2,500–$5,000 or more, including inspection fees. Fees are updated annually — check Auckland Council's current fee schedule for the latest figures. Budget for consent costs early to avoid surprises.
How long does it take to get building consent in Auckland?
Auckland Council has a statutory 20 working days to process your application. In practice, this can extend if the council issues Requests for Further Information (RFIs), which pause the clock. Complete, accurate applications processed by an experienced architect typically stay within the 20-day timeframe. Resource consent adds a separate 20–60+ working day process on top.
What is the difference between a property file and a LIM report?
A property file contains detailed plans, structural measurements, consent records, and council pipe locations for your specific property — your architect needs this for consent work. A LIM report provides a broader overview including zoning, flood risk, and consent summaries. They complement each other, but the property file is the essential document for any consent-related renovation.
Can I remove a load-bearing wall without consent?
No. Removing a load-bearing wall is a structural change that always requires building consent in New Zealand. A structural engineer or architect must design a replacement beam, and the work needs to be inspected by Auckland Council before the ceiling is closed up. Doing this without consent is illegal and can compromise your home's structural safety.
What happens if I do building work without consent in Auckland?
Fines for unconsented building work can reach $200,000 under the Building Act 2004, with an additional $10,000 per day if work continues after a notice. Unconsented work also creates problems when you sell — buyers' solicitors will check the property file. You may need to apply for a Certificate of Acceptance, which is more expensive than getting consent upfront.
Do I need an architect for my renovation?
For consent-required work — extensions, recladding, garage conversions, load-bearing wall removals — yes. The architect produces the detailed drawings that get submitted to Auckland Council. For non-consent renovations like bathroom or kitchen cosmetic updates, you don't need an architect. At Superior Renovations, we handle the design in-house for non-consent projects.
What is a Code Compliance Certificate and why do I need one?
A CCC is Auckland Council's formal confirmation that your consented building work has been completed according to the approved plans and meets the Building Code. You need it to legally complete any consent-required project. Keep your CCC — you'll need it when you sell, and missing CCCs create complications for buyers and insurers.
Can I build a granny flat without consent in New Zealand?
From January 2026, a new Schedule 1A exemption allows standalone dwellings up to 70 square metres to be built without building consent, provided they meet strict conditions — including being new construction, standalone, and fully Building Code compliant. This is a significant expansion from the previous 30m² limit. Talk to your builder or architect to confirm your project qualifies.
What renovations are exempt from building consent in NZ?
Schedule 1 of the Building Act exempts low-risk work including like-for-like repairs and replacements, painting, replacing fixtures in the same location, small sheds under 10m², and some plumbing repairs done by a registered plumber. Even exempt work must still comply with the Building Code. MBIE's canibuildit.govt.nz tool can help you check your specific project.
Further Resources for your renovation consent journey
- 特色项目和客户故事,查看部分项目的规格。
- 来自奥克兰的真实客户故事
- Our detailed renovation consent process guide
- Home renovation terms you should know
需要更多信息?
利用我们的免费《房屋翻新完整指南》(48 页),无论您是已经开始翻新还是正在决定翻新,这都不是一个简单的过程,本指南包括一份免费的 100 多点检查清单--将帮助您避免代价高昂的错误。
还有问题没有解答?
Book a no-obligation consultation with the team at Superior Renovations,
we’d love to meet you to discuss your renovation ideas!
Or call us on 0800 199 888
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