PRIMROSE HILL · CAMDEN

Do I need planning permission for a basement in Primrose Hill?

Conservation-area & Article 4 area

Yes — a full planning application under Camden's strict basement policy, and the tight terraces make the party-wall and neighbour dimension acute. There's no permitted-development route for basements; Camden generally caps excavation at a single storey under the footprint with a Basement Impact Assessment, and Primrose Hill's conservation area scrutinises the visible lightwells and railings.

Primrose Hill's planning constraints

Real · planning.data.gov.uk
Conservation AreaA protected area — stricter rules on changes to buildings.
Primrose Hill · planning.data.gov.uk
Applies
Article 4 DirectionExtra restrictions — some normal building rights are removed here.
Primrose Hill Conservation Area (various properties) - UNDER REVIEW · planning.data.gov.uk
Applies

Checked at a representative Primrose Hill point (51.5390, -0.1524) against official planning.data.gov.uk geometry · Open Government Licence. Camden has 40 conservation areas. Conservation areas and Article 4 directions are drawn street by street — confirm your exact address above, and treat Article 4 as “verify on the council register” because property-specific directions aren't in the national dataset.

PD ROUTE

What permitted development allows in Primrose Hill

There is no useful permitted development route for basements in practice — assume a full planning application everywhere, with a Basement Impact Assessment covering ground conditions, hydrology, structural methodology and construction management. Camden, Westminster and Islington all limit basements to a single storey in most circumstances and protect listed buildings from excavation almost absolutely.

In a conservation area — which blankets much of prime north-west London, from Hampstead to St John's Wood — there is no permitted-development route to lose, but the visible elements are assessed closely on heritage grounds: lightwells, railings, front-garden changes, rooflights and any external alteration. An Article 4 direction or a listed building can remove the option of excavation altogether.

Party wall procedure is heavier than for any other project: underpinning shared walls triggers awards with detailed method statements on both sides, and neighbour objections — on noise, vibration, structural risk and years of disruption — are the norm rather than the exception. The applications that succeed arrive with the engineering done, not promised.

Every basement needs a full application plus a Basement Impact Assessment on ground conditions, hydrology, structure and construction management, with Camden limiting most schemes to a single storey beneath the existing footprint. On Primrose Hill's narrow terraced plots, underpinning the party walls on both sides triggers awards with the neighbours either side, and objections on noise, vibration and years of disruption are the norm rather than the exception.

WHAT YOU
MAY NEED

Approvals & who handles them

What you may needLikelihoodWho usually deals with it
Planning permission
New or extended basements normally need full planning permission in London; many boroughs apply a specific basement policy. An Article 4 direction removes the relevant permitted-development right here, so a full application is required.
RequiredPlanning consultant / architect
Basement Impact Assessment / method statement
Most London councils require a BIA covering structure, ground movement, hydrology and construction method.
RequiredSpecialist basement engineer
Building Regulations approval
Required — structure, waterproofing (tanking), drainage, ventilation and fire.
RequiredBuilding control + your builder
Party Wall etc. Act 1996 notice
Deep excavation adjacent to neighbours engages the Act on every shared boundary — expect surveyors and awards.
RequiredParty wall surveyor
Specialist basement structural engineer
Underpinning and retaining design needs a specialist structural engineer throughout.
RequiredSpecialist basement engineer
Drainage / SuDS / flood-risk information
Pumped drainage, sustainable drainage and flood resilience are commonly required.
VerifyDrainage engineer + water authority
Conservation-area design control
In a conservation area, materials, detailing and impact on the area's character are assessed closely — expect conditions.
RequiredHeritage adviser / conservation officer
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.
VerifyHeritage adviser / conservation officer

Likely route for Primrose Hill: High risk Expect a full planning application with a Basement Impact Assessment — this is the highest-risk domestic project. Likelihoods reflect this area's conservation-area and Article 4 state; confirm each with the council.

INDICATIVE
COST

Indicative cost & timeline

Cost per m² (low)£6,000
Cost per m² (expected)£8,500
Cost per m² (high — difficult ground / high water table)£12,000+
Typical project (35–50m² single storey)£210,000 – £600,000
Professional and consultant fees (add)15–25% of build

Basements carry the widest cost uncertainty of any project — ground conditions and water management can move budgets six figures. Ranges from real project data; VAT excluded. Never commit on a single quote without a ground investigation.

Feasibility, ground investigation, BIA3–6 months
Planning decision10–16 weeks
Party wall awards (multiple)3–6 months (parallel)
Build8–14 months
WATCH
OUT

When it's not permitted development

On a terrace, you're underpinning two shared walls, so the party-wall process — and neighbour objection — is the practical bottleneck as much as planning. A listed terrace is protected from excavation almost absolutely; ground water can end a scheme at the Basement Impact Assessment stage.

  • Underestimating party-wall cost and time — awards on multiple boundaries can run to months and five figures before excavation.
  • Ground-water and made-ground conditions driving waterproofing and pumping cost.
  • Borough basement policy capping depth, footprint or garden coverage.
  • Neighbour objections and monitoring conditions extending the programme.
NEXT
STEPS

Next steps for Primrose Hill

  1. Commission a specialist basement structural engineer and (where required) a Basement Impact Assessment author.
  2. Establish the borough's basement policy limits before designing.
  3. Serve Party Wall notices early to every affected neighbour and budget for awards.
  4. Submit a full planning application with the BIA and method statement.

The fastest way to know where your Primrose Hill property stands is the free address check — it runs the conservation-area and Article 4 geometry at your exact coordinates. For a chartered surveyor's read before you commit, Hampstead Chartered Surveyors (RICS-regulated) review feasibility independently.

Check a NW1 address →Basement extensions in London: cost, risk and planning reality

FAQ

Primrose Hill · basement or excavation questions

01

Can I build a basement under a Primrose Hill terraced house?

Under a full planning application and Camden's basement policy — typically a single storey beneath the footprint, with a Basement Impact Assessment. On a terrace you'll also underpin both party walls, triggering awards with the neighbours either side; a listed house is protected from excavation almost absolutely. There's no permitted-development route.
02

What stops a Primrose Hill basement?

Most often ground water — picked up by the Basement Impact Assessment — Camden's single-storey limit, and the party-wall process across two shared walls with objecting neighbours. The schemes that succeed arrive with the engineering and hydrology resolved, not promised.
Reviewed by
Savas Bulduk MRICSDirector, Hampstead Chartered Surveyors & Building Consultancy — RICS-regulated (Firm Reg. 923064)
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More for Primrose Hill

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.

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