Why industrial box and valley gutters around North London corrode and leak
Walk around the industrial estates and warehouse buildings in North London and you’ll spot a recurring problem: the built-in gutters. Decades of weather, mixed with the fumes from the North Circular and local industry, really hammer those steel box gutters. We see it worst in the Lea Valley corridor, where manufacturing and logistics sites are packed in. Old steel gutters there degrade fast if they’re not lined. Water just sits in those troughs, reacting with the metal and any rubbish that piles up. Then the leaks start. It’s always the same story, threatening the building below.
Around North London we repair and reline leaking box and valley gutters in place, with a brushed gutter coating where the steel is sound but weathered.
The building stock of North London – ageing steel gutters in key locations
North London’s industrial buildings follow a pretty clear pattern. You’ve got the trading estates around Brimsdown and the units along the A406 corridor, mostly flat-roofed places from the 60s to the 90s. Many still have their original steel box gutters hidden behind the parapet walls. The old warehouse conversions in Tottenham Hale and the wholesale markets in Edmonton have them too. It’s not just the big estates; smaller industrial units off the Cambridge Road and Mollison Avenue often have the same construction. These hidden gutters are out of sight, out of mind, until the leaks start. It’s a widespread issue across the area’s commercial properties.
- Steel box gutters that came with 1960s-1990s buildings
- Common around industrial hotspots like the Lea Valley
- Often tucked away behind parapet walls
- Leaks usually start at the seams and where the water goes down
- Rubbish builds up, speeding up the corrosion
Why replacing a built-in gutter is so disruptive and what lining does instead
If you tried to rip out and replace the original box gutters in North London’s industrial buildings, you’d be taking down parapet walls and sections of roof. That’s a massive job, too expensive and disruptive. It could shut a business down for weeks. Lining is a much smarter way to go. We slide a continuous, joint-free membrane inside the old gutter. It keeps the original structure, but you get a brand new, waterproof channel. This means minimal disruption to your operations. Most jobs are done in a single day. For the many North London businesses in older premises with these hidden drainage systems, lining is the only real way to stop the leaks without major construction work.

What a proper gutter lining system involves
A proper gutter lining job starts with a deep clean. We get rid of all the rubbish and corrosion from the existing channel. Then, we carefully fit the lining material, a flexible but tough membrane, making sure it follows every curve of the gutter with no gaps or folds. Where the water goes down and at the overflows, we always reinforce those critical points with extra sealing. The finished lining gives you a smooth, continuous surface. Water sheds off it easily, and the original metal structure is protected from any more damage. Forget those patch repairs that crack at the first frost; this system treats the whole gutter run as one single unit.
Our survey-led process
Every single gutter lining project we do in North London begins with a detailed survey. We go over the existing gutter’s condition, its size, and how it’s laid out. We note any old repairs or changes. We map out where the access points are and where the outlets sit, as well as what your building actually needs for drainage. All this information lets us specify exactly the right lining system that will work best for your place. The survey also flags up any other issues, like blocked outlets or damaged flashings, which could cause problems later if we didn’t deal with them.

Why the survey comes before any specification
Gutter lining isn’t something you just pick off a shelf. North London’s industrial buildings vary a lot, so every installation needs careful planning. A unit on the Angel Road trading estate might need a completely different approach to one on the Mollison Avenue industrial park, even if they look similar from the outside. We have to inspect the actual gutter, its size, its shape, its condition, and everything around it, to know what materials and methods will give you a lasting repair. This survey-first approach stops expensive mistakes and makes sure the solution genuinely fits your building.
Learn more about gutter lining or request a free survey.
Recently — July 2026
We plan the work around how your site runs, so the building stays in use while we are on the roof.
Dry summer spells are the window for tackling cut-edge corrosion and tired finishes before the autumn rain sets back in.





