Architectural drawings · Kensington and Chelsea

Architectural drawings in Earl's Court

Fixed-fee planning, building regulations, loft, extension and mansard drawings for properties in Earl's Court (SW5). MCIAT chartered. 30% below typical London architect rates.

Earl's Court at a glance

Borough
Kensington and Chelsea
Postcodes
SW5
Dominant stock
Stucco terraces, Edwardian mansion blocks
Local landmarks
Earl's Court station
Article 4 in force
Yes
Conservation areas in borough
38
Local context

Why Earl's Court needs a specialist

Earl's Court is Victorian stucco terraces, mansion blocks. The streetscape is dominated by stucco terraces, edwardian mansion blocks, which means design decisions — roofscape, rear glazing, side returns, mansards — must respect the period rhythm of the row. Kensington and Chelsea planning (RBKC Planning) decides applications here. Article 4 Directions covering HMOs, office-to-residential, and basement developments — RBKC has some of the strictest basement policies in London.

Services in Earl's Court

Frequently asked in Earl's Court

Earl's Court planning questions

Do I need planning permission for an extension in Earl's Court?

Earl's Court sits within Kensington and Chelsea, so applications are decided by RBKC Planning. Most single-storey rear extensions and side-returns on terraced or semi-detached homes in Earl's Court fall under Permitted Development — up to 3m deep (attached) or 4m (detached), under 4m high. Flats, listed buildings and conservation areas always require full planning. Article 4 status here: Yes. We check eligibility free at the site visit.

What's the dominant housing stock in Earl's Court?

Earl's Court is characterised by Victorian stucco terraces, mansion blocks. The dominant stock is Stucco terraces, Edwardian mansion blocks. We've drawn extensions and lofts for every period represented here — Victorian rear additions, Edwardian side returns, 1930s wrap-arounds, and contemporary infill where the streetscape allows.

How long does a planning application take in Earl's Court?

RBKC Planning statutory determination is 8 weeks for householder applications. Validation typically adds 1–2 weeks. From your first call to a decision, expect 12–14 weeks total: 1 week measured survey, 2 weeks design, 1–2 weeks validation, 8 weeks determination. We've achieved a 98% first-time approval rate across Kensington and Chelsea.

How much does a loft conversion cost in Earl's Court?

Loft conversion drawings in Earl's Court start at £1,225 for planning + building regs combined. Construction cost (separate from drawings) is £45,000–£75,000 for a standard rear dormer on a Victorian or Edwardian terrace, £65,000–£95,000 for a hip-to-gable plus dormer. We quote drawings as a fixed fee — no hourly creep.

Are there conservation areas in Earl's Court?

Kensington and Chelsea has 38 designated conservation areas. Nearest to Earl's Court: Kensington. In a conservation area, full planning is required for most external work (including roof additions, rendering, replacement windows). We prepare a Heritage Statement covering the conservation area's character appraisal.

Nearby in Kensington and Chelsea

Other neighbourhoods we cover

Postcodes covering Earl's Court

SW5

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