Do I need planning permission for an extension in Primrose Hill?
Usually a full householder application, and the constraint is as much the neighbours as the conservation area. Primrose Hill sits in a conservation area with Article 4 directions, so permitted-development rights are restricted; and its tight terraces with short rear gardens make neighbour daylight and overlooking the decisive issues. A modest single-storey rear in matching brick is the realistic scheme.
Primrose Hill's planning constraints
Real · planning.data.gov.ukChecked 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.
What permitted development allows in Primrose Hill
Permitted development (GPDO Class A) covers single-storey rear extensions up to 3m beyond the original rear wall on attached houses and 4m on detached, with a maximum height of 4m. The 'larger home extension' route extends this to 6m/8m through prior approval with neighbour consultation — but that larger route is not available in conservation areas.
In conservation areas, the basic 3m/4m single-storey rear PD allowance usually survives — what conservation-area status removes is side extensions and two-storey rear extensions. An Article 4 direction can remove more, but Camden's directions in Hampstead and Belsize target front-and-side appearance (solar panels, window changes, boundary treatments), not the single-storey rear allowance. Flats have no PD rights at all. Two-storey rear extensions in conservation areas always need full permission.
Practical rule across London: check the address first. If a conservation area or Article 4 direction applies, budget for a full householder application decided on design, neighbour daylight (the 45-degree test) and materials.
Under permitted development, side extensions (GPDO Class A) must be single storey, no more than 4m high and no wider than half the original house — but side extensions are excluded from PD entirely in conservation areas. Wrap-around schemes combining side and rear elements usually exceed PD limits and need full permission everywhere.
In practice, most London side returns proceed by full householder application. The good news is the precedent base: on streets of identical terraces, a consented side return three doors down is the strongest evidence your scheme can cite. Officers focus on the boundary wall height, neighbour daylight and the junction with the host roof.
The 3m single-storey rear allowance can survive in the conservation area where no Article 4 direction has removed it, but side returns are excluded from permitted development here and two-storey schemes always need full permission. On Primrose Hill's narrow plots, the 45-degree daylight test to the neighbour and the painted-render streetscape do most of the deciding. Flats — common in the converted terraces — have no permitted-development rights at all.
MAY NEED
Approvals & who handles them
| What you may need | Likelihood | Who usually deals with it |
|---|---|---|
| Planning permission / permitted development PD may cover a modest single-storey rear extension on a whole house; flats have no PD rights, and conservation-area status removes side and two-storey rear extensions — any of which pushes a scheme to a full application. Confirm permitted development with a lawful development certificate rather than assuming it. | Likely | Planning consultant / architect |
| Building Regulations approval Required for the structure, foundations, drainage, insulation and glazing. | Required | Building control + your builder |
| Party Wall etc. Act 1996 notice Excavating within 3m of a neighbour's structure or building on the boundary line triggers the Act — serve notices early. | Likely | Party wall surveyor |
| Structural engineer's design Foundations and any structural opening into the existing rear wall need an engineer. | Required | Structural engineer |
| Drainage build-over agreement If the extension crosses a public sewer, a build-over agreement with the water authority is needed. | Possible | Drainage 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. | Required | Heritage 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. | Verify | Heritage adviser / conservation officer |
Likely route for Primrose Hill: High risk — Likely a full householder planning application — conservation-area status removes side and two-storey rear extensions, and flats have no PD rights; a single-storey rear on a house may still be permitted development. Likelihoods reflect this area's conservation-area and Article 4 state; confirm each with the council.
COST
Indicative cost & timeline
| Cost per m² (low — straightforward site) | £3,000 |
| Cost per m² (expected) | £3,800 |
| Cost per m² (high — conservation spec, hard access) | £4,600+ |
| Typical build cost (12–18m² single storey) | £36,000 – £83,000 |
| Professional fees, surveys, party wall (add) | 10–18% of build |
Indicative London ranges calibrated from real project data. Conservation-area specifications (matching stock brick, lime mortar, bespoke glazing) and restricted rear access are the two biggest cost drivers. VAT not included.
| Design and drawings | 4–8 weeks |
| Planning decision (full application) | 8–12 weeks (8-week statutory target) |
| Prior approval route, where available | 42 days |
| Party wall agreements | 4–10 weeks (parallel) |
| Build | 3–5 months |
OUT
When it's not permitted development
Short gardens mean even a modest projection can fail the daylight test to the house behind; deep or flat-roofed boxes are the usual refusals. Keep the rear elevation legible and the brick matched, and check whether the painted render front is part of what the conservation area protects.
- Article 4 directions bite on front-and-side appearance (solar panels, windows, boundary works), not on a single-storey rear — but they're drawn property by property, so verify at the address rather than assuming from the borough.
- The 45-degree daylight test trimming depth on tight terraced gardens.
- Party wall awards on both flanks adding cost and programme before a brick is laid.
- Conservation-area material conditions (brick match, lime mortar) discovered after pricing, not before.
STEPS
Next steps for Primrose Hill
- Confirm the planning route — lawful development certificate (PD) or a householder application — before committing to a design.
- Brief an architect/designer and a structural engineer from these facts.
- Serve Party Wall notices to both neighbours well before the start date.
- Check for a public sewer crossing the footprint and budget for a build-over agreement if so.
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 →Do you need planning permission for a rear extension in London? →
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Conservation-heavy, design-literate, precedent-driven.
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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.
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