The Scotsman

Tradespeop­le Lee and Sean Cairns

It’s been a challengin­g 18 months for this husband and wife-led constructi­on firm

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When husband-and-wife team Lee and Sean Cairns started their constructi­on business five years ago, they could have hardly predicted the challenges of the last 18 months.

Thistle Trade Group specialise­s in home renovation­s and setting up the company was a natural vehicle for their varied talents.

Sean’s background is in industrial constructi­on while Lee spent 20 years in the finance sector.

The couple were experience­d in renovation work for their own property portfolio, but now they work for private clients in the residentia­l sector, taking on restoratio­ns, extensions and home conversion­s.

Sean says: “For the last 18 months, it has really been a case of adapt to survive. We have had to plan for only very small groups of tradespeop­le working together to fit in with Covid rules.

“The logistics have become a lot more complicate­d. We’ve expanded the office team because we have to do so much more scheduling of the workforce and the materials.

“With shortages and supply chain issues, we are now using different suppliers, many of them more local, which has helped sawmills and small companies as the larger ones struggled to keep up with demand.”

Lee and Sean each have clearly defined roles in the company, something they believe is paramount to a smooth working relationsh­ip when it comes to a husband-and-wife team.

Sean says: “I go out to sites, project managing, meeting clients and keeping them up to date. Lee and her team work closer with architects, structural engineers and complete all the paperwork, red tape and planning.”

A large part of the job is to interpret what the client wants. From a sketch, or pictures from the internet or a magazine, the Thistle Trade team aims to source the items needed, cost the job, cover the planning, find the right people to design and build, and source materials, in the right order.

Lee says: “As well as that one-stop shop, we have clients coming to us with plans already in place and we just build the project for them.”

The Cairns both agree that clients have a much more clearly defined vision of what they want nowadays. Sean adds: “It seems everyone has had time to refine their visions. They come armed with mood boards and very precise details.”

The company covers Edinburgh, Fife and the Lothians, and a lot of their work involves adapting older houses for modern life. A typical recent project was a threestore­y townhouse in Morningsid­e, with two rooms on the ground floor knocked though to create a spectacula­r new kitchen and living space.

Sean says: “Projects like that

can be quite an undertakin­g architectu­rally, but it is also about marrying traditiona­l features – doric pillars and intricate panelling, for instance – with a very contempora­ry kitchen style.”

The firm is equally happy matching existing cornicing, renovating period staircases and restoring traditiona­l features, and many projects are a mix of restoratio­n, building and installing contempora­ry modern comforts.

Of the current climate, Lee says: “We have to be careful what work we take on. In one week, we have had 19 new enquiries and each will require meetings, inspection­s and preparing quotes. You might get 19 people wanting to go ahead after all that, or none, but that is the nature of the business.”

The firm takes on approximat­ely five large projects a year, with time around those to take on smaller jobs, depending on demand.

Proud of their customer service, Lee says: “Our clients always come to us through word of mouth recommenda­tions.”

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 ??  ?? Recent successful Thistle Trade Group jobs include renovating and extending this property in Lanark
Road, Edinburgh, and Blackwood Green in Dunfermlin­e, left and below.
Pictures: Angus Behm of Square Foot Media; Sean and Lee by Lisa Ferguson
Recent successful Thistle Trade Group jobs include renovating and extending this property in Lanark Road, Edinburgh, and Blackwood Green in Dunfermlin­e, left and below. Pictures: Angus Behm of Square Foot Media; Sean and Lee by Lisa Ferguson

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