One hall spine
Wet areas are rotated so you always have a usable route where physics allows.
Walkinstown is heavy on terraced and semi layouts where one hall links every room - painting is sequenced so you are not trapped behind wet walls, and back extensions get sensible junctions to original brickwork lines.
From kitchen refreshes to complete repaint programmes, projects are handled with careful masking, organised staging, and consistent quality checks.
Wet areas are rotated so you always have a usable route where physics allows.
Old-to-new ceiling and wall breaks are feathered so extensions do not look like a patch.
Party-wall awareness keeps sanding and banging within reasonable daytime hours.
Rooms are ordered so wet work moves away from the only toilet or the sole hall path; open-through lounges get ceiling plans that avoid stopping halfway visually.
Small yards mean ladder angles are tight - front elevations may be easier than rear gables; quotes follow photos of both sides.
Landlords get void scopes that name hall, living, and kitchen priorities when turnaround time is short.
Tallaght and Templeogue pages help if your search straddles south-west Dublin.
They finished the hall ceiling first so we could still use the kitchen door at night.
Michael Devlin, Homeowner, Walkinstown Green
★★★★★
Two-bed rental turned around in the void window - inventory clerk had nothing to flag on paint.
Catherine Power, Landlord, Perrystown
★★★★★
The old back wall to new extension finally reads as one room, not two whites fighting.
Stephen Gorman, Homeowner, Cromlech Fields
★★★★★
Walkinstown clients often want downstairs packages, two-bedroom rentals, or exterior fronts before sale - link through below.
Ceilings and high areas are worked in short bursts with drying holds so doors can reopen on agreed nights.
Often sensible if one space must stay liveable; the quote states which zone is active each week.
Shared boundaries and overspray risk are checked; masking and access respect the adjoining property.