Painters and Decorators in Box

Box stone, conservation areas, and Bybrook valley mill conversions — getting the finish right starts with knowing the building. Bath Decorators are painters and decorators in Box, covering the village and surrounding SN13 8 area.
We cover London Road, Box Hill, Quarry Hill, London Terrace, Barnetts Hill, Beech Road, and Hazelbury Hill.
- Interior painting: Stone cottage rooms, converted mill interiors, modern detached
- Exterior painting: Box stone, breathable coatings, hilltop and valley-floor properties
- Wallpapering: Chimney breast features, full-room papering, period cottage interiors
- House painting: Interior and exterior scheduled as a single project
- Kitchen cabinet painting: Period cottage kitchens, solid wood and MDF doors
- Commercial painting: Converted mill offices, local business premises
Call 01225 234445 for a free quote in Box.
Interior Painting in Box
Interior Painting in Stone Cottages
Box’s older properties have rooms that reward careful preparation. Pre-1900 lime plaster walls, exposed stone, and low ceilings hold paint differently to modern plasterboard.
Lime plaster needs a breathable paint system. Standard vinyl emulsion traps moisture and peels. We use breathable emulsions and prep walls thoroughly before any coat goes on.
Bare lime plaster gets a sealing coat diluted 10% before the finish coats are applied. Ceilings in older Box cottages are often lower and slightly irregular — we sand and fill before painting to get a flat, even result.
Modern and Converted Properties
Newer builds on Brunel Way and the valley floor use standard plasterboard construction. These paint straightforwardly. New plaster needs adequate drying time before decorating — we check moisture levels before starting.
Mill conversions in the Bybrook valley often mix original stone walls with modern-built sections. Each surface is assessed and prepared to the correct standard. The result is a consistent finish across all wall types.


Exterior Painting on Box Stone


Breathable Coatings on Bath Stone
We use breathable paint systems on all Box stone. Silicate paints and mineral coatings let the stone manage moisture naturally. Lime wash is appropriate on uncoated stone where compatibility allows.
Box’s older buildings are Bath stone — porous limestone that must stay breathable. Standard masonry paint seals the surface and traps moisture, causing paint failure and frost damage. We confirm the correct system after assessing the existing surface before preparation begins.
Box Hill Exposed Properties
The quarryman’s cottages on Box Hill, Quarry Hill, and Barnetts Hill sit on the plateau above the valley. South-west and west-facing elevations face open farmland with little shelter.
These elevations get more wind-driven rain, more UV, and more temperature cycling than sheltered valley properties. Paint deteriorates faster here. We specify accordingly — exposed elevations get a third finish coat as standard. Where previous coatings have failed and moisture has entered the stone, the surface is cleaned back first.
Bybrook Valley and Conservation Area Properties
Valley-Floor Properties and Mill Conversions
Valley-floor properties face the opposite challenge to hilltop cottages. The Bybrook valley has restricted air movement and persistent damp from the wooded valley sides — stone walls here stay wet longer after rain.
Surface moisture testing is part of our standard preparation on any valley-floor property. Mill conversions often have original stone sections alongside modern render or blockwork. Stone sections get breathable coatings; modern render sections use standard masonry paint.
Conservation Areas and Listed Buildings
Box parish has four conservation areas. Most of the village core along London Road falls within one. Listed building consent may be required for colour changes on listed properties.
Bath Decorators can advise on colour selection within Cotswolds AONB guidelines. Stone-based neutrals, off-whites, and heritage tones are consistently approved. Bright contemporary colours are rarely appropriate here.


Wallpapering in Box


Wallpapering in Period Stone Cottages
Box’s stone cottage interiors respond particularly well to wallpaper. Exposed stone walls, chimney breasts, and timber beams give rooms a character that wallpaper enhances rather than covers.
Chimney breasts are the natural focal point in cottage sitting rooms and main bedrooms. A feature paper gives the room a clear focus — botanical prints, geometric patterns, and textured papers all work well. We advise on pattern scale relative to ceiling height and room proportions.
Lining Paper on Old Plaster Walls
Pre-1900 cottages with original lime plaster benefit from cross-lining before the decorative paper goes up. A heavy lining paper applied horizontally gives a flat, stable base.
This adds a day to the project — the finished result is consistently better. We include a cross-lining assessment in every wallpapering quote on a period property.
Full-Room Papering
Full-room papering works particularly well in Box cottage hallways and studies. The enclosed scale of a cottage room suits a strong pattern on all four walls.
We advise on pattern repeat length relative to room size. We strip existing wall coverings and prepare the surface before any new paper goes up.
Kitchen Cabinet and Commercial Painting in Box
Kitchen Cabinet Painting
Period stone cottage kitchens often have original solid wood doors or older painted MDF that needs refreshing. A cabinet repaint costs a fraction of a full kitchen replacement and gives the same transformation.
Solid wood doors are sanded back, primed, and finished in two top coats. MDF doors are filled and sealed before painting to prevent absorption and edge swelling.
Commercial Painting in Box
Converted mill offices and local business premises need a different approach to domestic work. Timescales matter and disruption must be minimal. We work around business hours where needed.
Mill conversion offices often have original stone walls alongside modern partitions. Each surface is assessed and prepared correctly for a consistent finish across the whole space.

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How We Work in Box
1. Site Visit and Assessment
We visit before quoting. We check every surface: stone condition, existing coatings, render integrity, and moisture levels. We note any structural issues that need resolving before decoration begins.
2. Written Quote
You receive a fixed written quote covering preparation, materials, and labour. No surprises on invoice day.
3. Surface Preparation
We clean, repair, and prime all surfaces to the correct standard. Old coatings are assessed and failing sections are removed. On Box stone, preparation is where the quality is built.
4. Application
Paint is applied in the correct conditions. Exterior coatings need temperatures above 5 degrees and a dry window of at least 48 hours. We monitor forecasts and plan around them.
5. Inspection and Handover
We inspect finished work in good light before we leave. Touch-ups are completed on site. We walk through the job with you before closing.
Costs for Decorating in Box
Prices below are estimates. Every property is different. Call 01225 234445 for a precise quote.

What Affects the Price
Box properties are mostly period stone cottages and mill conversions, which sit at the higher end of local decorating costs. Three things affect the price most.
Surface type and condition. Box stone needs breathable coatings, which cost more per litre than standard masonry paint. Poor stone condition, coating failures, or high moisture content add preparation time.
Access. Steep hillside properties on Box Hill may need specialist scaffold. Valley-floor mill conversions can have restricted access. Both add to the quote.
Listed building status. Listed properties may require heritage-specified materials, which carry a cost premium.
Typical Price Ranges
Bath stone properties consistently cost more to paint than equivalent rendered properties. Budget 20 to 40 percent more than you would for a standard rendered cottage.
- Exterior repaint, Box Hill exposed stone cottage: £3,000–£6,000
- Exterior repaint, valley-floor property or mill conversion: £3,500–£7,000
- Interior full redecoration, stone cottage: £3,500–£7,000
- Feature wall wallpapering, chimney breast in period cottage: £450–£900
Get a Fixed Written Quote
Call 01225 234445 to arrange a free site visit. We assess the surfaces, confirm the correct specification, and provide a fixed written quote.
Painters and Decorators in Box FAQs
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