Garden room in W11
W11 covers Notting Hill. For a garden room, 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.
W11 is the Ladbroke estate's communal-garden squares and the Norland and Pembridge conservation areas — some of London's most recognisable stucco. Conservation designation and numerous property-specific Article 4 directions narrow what's permitted; basements follow K&C's Policy CL7 — single storey, no more than 50% of each garden or open part of the site.
First checks for garden room
Service-specific- The intended use (office/gym vs sleeping) — it changes everything
- Garden coverage and position limits for permitted development
- Whether Building Regulations apply for the size and use
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 · Kensington and Chelsea
Real · planning.data.gov.ukKensington and Chelsea has 39 conservation areas and 82 Article 4 areas in the official dataset. W11 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 Kensington and Chelsea planning guide.
What changes the route?
| Where constraints apply | May be permitted development for incidental use, but conservation / Article 4 tightens the limits — confirm first. |
| Where no designation is found | May be permitted development if used as an office/gym (not for sleeping) — confirm with a lawful development certificate. |
Approvals and who deals with them
| What you may need | Likelihood | Who usually deals with it |
|---|---|---|
| Planning permission / permitted development Incidental use may be PD within the outbuilding limits; sleeping accommodation, conservation areas and Article 4 need a full application. | Possible | Planning consultant / architect |
| Building Regulations approval Depends on size and use — small detached outbuildings can be exempt; sleeping accommodation or larger structures are not. | Possible | Building control + your builder |
| Party Wall etc. Act 1996 notice Foundations within 3m of a neighbour's structure, or building up to the boundary, can engage the Act. | Possible | Party wall surveyor |
| Listed building consent We do NOT check listed status. If the property is listed, consent is needed for works affecting its character — confirm on the National Heritage List for England. | Verify | Heritage adviser / conservation officer |
Cost context
| Cost per m² — lower (straightforward) | £2,200 / m² |
| Cost per m² — typical | £3,000 / m² |
| Cost per m² — higher (complex / conservation spec) | £3,800 / m² |
| Typical project (9–16 m²) | £20,000 – £61,000 |
Indicative London ranges from real project data. The honest budget includes the invisible half — foundations, power and drainage. VAT excluded.
Watch-outs in W11
- Designing for 'incidental' use then living/sleeping in it — that converts it to a use needing full permission.
- Exceeding the 50% garden-coverage limit once existing outbuildings are counted.
- Conservation/Article 4 controls removing the side-of-house and coverage allowances.
- Drainage, power and data runs across the garden adding unbudgeted cost.
Next steps
- Fix the intended use (incidental vs sleeping) — it determines the whole planning and building-control route.
- Confirm the PD position with a lawful development certificate, or apply for planning if outside PD.
- Check whether Building Regulations apply for the size/use proposed.
- Plan services (power, data, drainage) into the cost from the start.
Related guides
More services in W11
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 property's planning history and any enforcement
Service guide →First check: Whether the building is listed, and at what grade
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.