8 from adjacent districts — postcode shown on each card.
Banbury's mix of Georgian town houses, Victorian terraces, and ever-expanding new-build estates creates steady demand for architects who understand both heritage constraints and modern living needs. Whether you're extending a stone cottage in Bloxham, reconfiguring a canal-side property near Castle Quay, or navigating listed-building consent in the town's conservation area, finding an architect who knows Cherwell District Council's planning quirks is essential.
Banbury sits at a planning crossroads — Cherwell's housing targets mean extensions and conversions are common, but the area's heritage (particularly the conservation area around Parsons Street and South Bar) means constraints apply to older properties. Ironstone and brick-built Victorian terraces dominate the inner wards, while the northern estates like Hanwell Fields and Hardwick bring requests for garage conversions and modern rear extensions. Architects here routinely deal with Cherwell's pre-app advice service (worthwhile for anything contentious) and Oxford Green Belt pressures that push development toward brownfield sites. Listed building work requires specialist knowledge — several Grade II properties near the church and Banbury Cross need consent for even minor internal alterations. Fees typically run 8–12% of build cost for full service, though some offer fixed-fee packages for straightforward single-storey extensions (£2,500–4,500 for drawings and planning). Expect busier pipelines in spring when homeowners aim for summer planning submissions, and delays if your project needs archaeology assessments (the Roman settlement history occasionally triggers this).
Initial consultations are usually free or low-cost (£150–300 for a measured survey visit). For a typical single-storey rear extension, expect eight to twelve weeks from instruction to planning submission — longer if party wall matters arise or if you're in the conservation area. Full architectural service includes feasibility, planning drawings, building regs, and tender support; many Banbury practices also offer planning-only packages if you're using a design-and-build firm afterward. ARB registration (Architects Registration Board) is legally required to use the title 'architect'; check the register online. Cherwell's planning portal shows recent approvals in your street, which helps gauge what they'll accept. Budget for planning fees (currently £206 for householder applications), structural engineer input (£400–800 for calculations), and potentially an ecologist's bat survey if you're touching pre-1960 roofs in rural OX15/OX17 postcodes. Architects often recommend pre-application advice (£150 from Cherwell for written feedback) to de-risk contentious schemes. Communication styles vary — some practices are hands-on site visitors, others stay desk-based and rely on your builder for interpretation.
Cherwell District Council enforces a tight conservation area covering Banbury's historic core (Bridge Street, Horsefair, Parsons Street). Any external changes here need conservation area consent alongside planning permission, and officers scrutinise materials, window styles, and roof lines closely. Listed buildings (Grade II scattered throughout, plus the notable Grade I church) require separate listed building consent — never assume 'like-for-like' repairs are exempt. The Oxford-Cambridge Arc growth agenda means Cherwell is generally pro-development, but neighbouring objections carry weight in dense Victorian streets where overlooking is the main refusal reason. Permitted development rights are often removed on newer estates (check the planning history), meaning even small extensions need full permission. If you're near the Oxford Canal or within 8m of a watercourse, you'll need Environment Agency involvement. Parking is a hot issue — Cherwell often requires retention of existing spaces, problematic for terraces with side returns you want to enclose. Article 4 Directions remove PD rights in parts of the town centre, so check before assuming your scheme is exempt.
Expect 8–12% of the construction cost for full service (design through to completion), so £4,000–7,000 for a typical £50,000 single-storey extension. Planning-only packages for straightforward projects run £2,500–4,500. Hourly rates are £60–120 if you need ad-hoc advice.
Not legally, but Cherwell's building control requires structural calculations and drawings that meet regs (stairs, headroom, fire escape). Most homeowners use an architect or architectural technologist to produce these and navigate planning if your roof changes externally or you're in the conservation area.
Statutory deadline is eight weeks for householder applications. Cherwell usually hits this unless they request amendments or neighbour objections need addressing. Pre-app advice can shorten the process by flagging issues early.
Possibly under permitted development — single-storey rear extensions up to 6m (detached) or 3m (terraced/semi) are often allowed, but many Banbury terraces have Article 4 Directions or are in the conservation area, removing these rights. Check your planning history on Cherwell's portal first.
Banbury's conservation area covers the historic town centre — roughly Bridge Street south to South Bar, west to Cherwell Edge, east to Middleton Road. Cherwell's planning pages have a map. Any development here needs extra scrutiny on materials and design, and even small changes may need consent.
Most architects produce building regs drawings as part of full service, then submit to Cherwell's building control or an approved inspector. Some stop after planning and you'd hire a technician or builder to handle regs separately — clarify what's included upfront.
Very few. Even internal alterations (removing walls, changing windows, altering fireplaces) usually need listed building consent if they affect character. External changes almost always do. Cherwell's conservation officer advises; unauthorised work can be criminally prosecutable and must be undone.
Yes, especially for tricky sites (steep gardens, overlooking issues, conservation area constraints). Feasibility studies cost £500–1,500 and test whether your aspirations are achievable under planning policy and budget before you invest in detailed drawings.
Architects (ARB-registered) handle design, aesthetics, and complex problem-solving; technologists focus on technical drawings and building regs compliance. For straightforward extensions, either works; for listed buildings or innovative design, an architect's training is usually worth the fee.
Depends on the contract. Full service includes site inspections at key stages (foundations, frame, pre-plaster, completion). Some offer this separately or you can appoint them as contract administrator to certify payments and handle builder disputes — agree scope and fee upfront.
About the author
Senior Editor, Building & Renovation · 15years' experience · RIBA Part 1 & Part 2 qualified
RIBA-trained, now writes about UK extensions, loft conversions and planning. 15 years covering UK building regulations.