Silicone render has quietly become the default modern finish in Hull, and for good reason — it is breathable, water-repellent and arrives pre-coloured so you never have to repaint it.
Why Silicone Render in Hull?
Self-cleaning behaviour means the rain itself washes the elevation, dramatically reducing the green algae streaking that plagues north-facing walls in Hull.
Local context: Hull, East Yorkshire
Long runs of Edwardian terraces in the city, plus large 1950s and 60s estates with rendered concrete-frame stock ideal for full-system upgrade. Flat, exposed coastal-estuary location means wind-driven rain on east elevations — silicone with high water repellence is the safe choice. We cover the full East Yorkshire area from HU1 outwards, including Cottingham, Anlaby, Willerby, Hessle, Sutton and the wider postcodes (HU1, HU3, HU5, HU6, HU7, HU8, HU16). Most Hull jobs are surveyed within 48 hours — we know the streets, parking constraints around landmarks like The Deep, and the typical substrates we'll find on the wall.
Benefits
- 20+ year typical service life with normal maintenance.
- Through-coloured — no painting, ever.
- Vapour-open: lets moisture out of the wall.
- Hydrophobic surface sheds rain on contact.
- Self-cleaning: rain rinses dust and pollutants off.
- Crack-resistant when applied over a properly meshed base coat.
Local considerations
- Dark colours absorb more heat — on south elevations they can drive thermal movement, so we usually steer customers towards mid-tones in Hull.
- Plan around scaffold access for Hull's tighter streets — bay windows, dormer detailing and roof junctions all need careful pricing.
- Don't render over compromised insulation. If the existing EWI boards are wet, we strip and remake before topcoat.
- Sound substrate is everything — over a failed cement scratch coat, even silicone will eventually fail.
- Choose grain size to suit the existing detailing — 1mm or 1.5mm reads cleaner on modern semis; 2mm on traditional stock.
Our process in Hull
- Free on-site survey — we measure, assess the substrate, and discuss colour samples on the wall.
- Scaffold up and full mask-off of windows, doors, roof edges and ground works.
- Substrate prep — cut out blown areas, fill, re-bed beads, and apply a primer where needed.
- Base coat with embedded fibreglass mesh — the structural layer that controls cracking.
- Silicone topcoat trowelled to a uniform 1.5mm or 2mm grain, finished off with consistent passes.
- Snag, clean down and remove scaffold — typical 3-bed semi turned around in 4–7 working days.
Areas we cover from Hull
We work across Hull (HU1, HU3, HU5, HU6, HU7, HU8, HU16) and the surrounding areas:
Frequently asked questions
Can I see previous work nearby?
Yes — we keep a portfolio of nearby jobs in East Yorkshire and can usually share addresses of recently completed projects in Hull or the next town over.
How long does silicone render last in Hull?
Properly installed over a sound base, expect 20+ years of service before any re-coat is needed. The through-colour means you don't need a five-yearly paint cycle.
Can you silicone render over existing pebbledash in Hull?
Yes — provided the pebbledash is sound and well-bonded, we apply a polymer-modified base coat with mesh, then the silicone topcoat. We test-knock the existing wall on survey to confirm.
What colours are available?
Several hundred. We bring sample tiles to the survey and offer a pre-mixed sample panel on the wall before you commit. Mid-tones perform best long-term.
Will silicone render stop damp?
It stops wind-driven rain getting in, but it isn't a damp-proof course. If you have rising damp or internal cold-bridging, those need addressing separately — we'll flag them on survey.
Do you cover all of Hull and the nearby areas?
Yes — we cover Cottingham, Anlaby, Willerby, Hessle, and the wider surrounding postcodes.
Call now to lock in a survey slot. We'll discuss colour, finish, scaffold and timing on the visit.
If you want a long-life, low-maintenance finish for your Hull property, silicone is almost always the right answer. Get in touch and we'll get a surveyor out this week.

