Listed and conservation works in SE5
SE5 covers Camberwell. For listed or conservation-area works, the route depends on the exact property: conservation areas, Article 4 directions, listed status, tenure and the scheme details all change the answer. Use this district guide as local context, then run the address check before relying on permitted development or any consent assumption.
SE5 is Camberwell's Georgian and Victorian stock — the Camberwell Grove, Camberwell Green, Addington Square and Sceaux Gardens conservation areas. Terrace rear extensions and lofts are common; inside the conservation areas a full application and careful roof design are expected, to the Residential Design Standards SPD.
First checks for listed and conservation
Service-specific- Whether the building is listed, and at what grade
- What needs listed building consent (inside and out)
- A heritage-experienced designer before any design work
District pages are not point-level checks. They do not confirm whether a specific property is listed, inside a conservation area, or subject to an Article 4 direction.
Local planning context · Southwark
Real · planning.data.gov.ukSouthwark has 55 conservation areas and 371 Article 4 areas in the official dataset. SE5 is too broad to say which apply to your property; the address check tests the point against available geometry.
Read the borough-wide context on the Southwark planning guide.
What changes the route?
| Where constraints apply | Heritage control governs this — listed building consent and/or planning will be needed; specialist input expected. |
| Where no designation is found | Confirm listed status first — if listed, consent is needed for changes affecting its character, inside and out. |
Approvals and who deals with them
| What you may need | Likelihood | Who usually deals with it |
|---|---|---|
| Listed building consent Required for works to a listed building that affect its character — internal and external. Carrying out such works without consent is a criminal offence. | Likely | Heritage adviser / conservation officer |
| Planning permission Conservation-area location and most external changes need a full application; PD is largely unavailable. | Likely | Planning consultant / architect |
| Conservation-area design control Materials, detailing and impact on the area's character are assessed closely — expect conditions. | Required | Heritage adviser / conservation officer |
| Building Regulations approval Applies as normal, balanced against heritage fabric — sympathetic solutions are often needed. | Likely | Building control + your builder |
| Specialist heritage input A heritage statement and a designer experienced with listed/conservation fabric are usually needed to gain consent. | Likely | Heritage adviser / conservation officer |
Cost context
No single numeric table is reliable for listed/conservation works — cost is driven almost entirely by scope and the specification premium. As a rule of thumb a conservation/listed specification (matching materials, traditional trades, bespoke joinery) commonly adds 15–25% over an equivalent standard build, before professional and consent fees.
Watch-outs in SE5
- Treating internal works as 'permission-free' in a listed building — internal alterations affecting character still need consent.
- Replacing windows, doors or finishes like-for-like without consent and triggering enforcement.
- Underestimating the specification premium for matching materials and traditional trades.
- Designing first, then discovering the heritage constraints — confirm listed status and conservation extent before any design.
Next steps
- Confirm whether the building is listed (and at what grade) on the National Heritage List for England before designing.
- Engage a designer/heritage consultant experienced with listed and conservation-area work.
- Get pre-application advice from the council's conservation officer — usually worth the fee.
- Prepare a heritage statement to support listed building consent and/or planning.
Related guides
If your home is listed, planning permission is only half the story.
Read the guide →Designated land edits the rulebook — here's the exact redline.
Read the guide →The designation nobody's heard of until it refuses their extension.
Read the guide →More services in SE5
First check: Freeholder consent / Licence to Alter — read your lease's alterations clause
Service guide →First check: A structural engineer's check on whether the wall is load-bearing
Service guide →First check: Whether it's permitted development or needs a planning application
Service guide →First check: Whether the dormer needs planning permission
Service guide →First check: Planning permission and the borough's basement policy
Service guide →First check: The intended use (office/gym vs sleeping) — it changes everything
Service guide →First check: The property's planning history and any enforcement
Service guide →Planning Permission Checker provides planning and cost intelligence for early feasibility only. It is not legal, planning, valuation, architectural, structural, or surveying advice. All estimates are indicative and must be verified by qualified professionals before purchase, design, planning submission, or construction.
Cost estimates are indicative only — not a quotation. Final price depends on survey, specification, structure, access, party wall matters, VAT, professional fees, and contractor availability.
Planning outcomes are not guaranteed. Local planning authorities make final decisions.