5 from adjacent districts — postcode shown on each card.
Bridgend sits at a crossroads of Welsh housing styles — Victorian and Edwardian terraces around the town centre, post-war estates spreading outward, and rural properties across the valleys. Whether you're extending a family semi in Wildmill, converting a stone barn near Pencoed, or navigating listed building consent in the town's conservation area, an architect familiar with CF postcodes and Welsh planning frameworks is essential.
Bridgend's architectural market reflects its position as a commuter town with strong links to Cardiff and Swansea, driving demand for extensions and loft conversions that maximise space in existing Victorian and Edwardian stock. The prevalence of 1960s and 70s estates across Brackla, Bryntirion, and Broadlands creates steady work for rear extensions and kitchen reconfigurations, whilst the rural hinterland — particularly around Coychurch, St Brides Major, and Ewenny — sees barn conversions and replacement dwellings that must satisfy stricter countryside planning policies under TAN 6. Welsh Building Regulations differ from England's in key areas (Part L energy efficiency, drainage via SAB/SuDS approval), and architects here must navigate Bridgend County Borough Council's planning department, which can be slow during peak periods. Conservation areas around Bridgend town centre and Newcastle require additional scrutiny, and any work to listed buildings (common in rural villages) demands pre-application discussions with Cadw. The market is price-sensitive compared to Cardiff, with many homeowners seeking measured surveys and planning drawings only, handling building control themselves to save fees.
Expect an initial consultation (often free or £100–200) where the architect surveys your property and discusses feasibility, followed by a fee proposal typically structured in RIBA stages. For a standard single-storey rear extension on a semi in Wildmill or Pendre, fees run £2,500–5,000 for planning drawings and basic building regs; full architectural service including tender and site inspections pushes £6,000–9,000. Loft conversions with dormer designs cost similar, whilst listed building projects or rural new builds easily exceed £10,000 due to additional consultations and design iterations. Timeline from instruction to planning submission: 6–10 weeks for straightforward schemes, longer if structural engineers, ecologists (for bat surveys on rural barns), or drainage engineers need input. Bridgend planning decisions take 8 weeks for householder applications, 13 weeks for full applications, though Welsh Government can call in controversial rural schemes. Your architect should be ARB-registered (mandatory to use the title) and ideally familiar with BCBC's local development plan (LDP), which governs settlement boundaries, design policies, and countryside constraints. Expect Welsh-language correspondence options and bilingual drawings for planning submissions.
Bridgend County Borough Council requires SAB (SuDS Approving Body) approval for any new drainage — even domestic extensions adding impermeable area — which runs parallel to planning and building control. Your architect must either handle this or coordinate with a civil engineer; assume £800–1,500 extra and 6–8 weeks' timeline. Listed buildings are scattered across villages like Ewenny (12th-century priory ruins nearby, listed cottages common) and Coity (castle conservation area) — any alterations need listed building consent plus planning permission, and Cadw's heritage officers often request costly lime mortar specifications and traditional roofing materials. Welsh planning policy (Future Wales, PPW11) is stricter than England's on countryside development; replacing a derelict barn or building outside settlement boundaries requires proving functional need or that the design is 'exceptional' architecturally. Conservation areas in Bridgend town centre limit window replacements and render finishes. Parking standards are generous compared to Cardiff, but BCBC still scrutinises access and turning space. Party Wall Act applies, though take-up is lower than in cities — still advisable for loft conversions affecting shared roof structures in terraces.
For a typical single-storey rear extension on a semi, expect £2,500–5,000 for planning and building regs drawings only, or £6,000–9,000 for full architectural service including tender documents and site inspections. Two-storey extensions or complex designs (L-shapes, multiple roof pitches) push toward the upper end. Rural barn conversions or listed building work often exceed £10,000 due to additional design iterations and consultations.
Not legally, but strongly advisable if you're adding a dormer (which needs planning permission) or if the existing roof structure is complex. An architect will ensure the design meets head-height requirements under building regs, coordinates with a structural engineer for steel calculations, and handles planning submission if the dormer exceeds permitted development limits. Fees typically £3,000–6,000 for a standard dormer scheme including building regs.
Bridgend County Borough Council aims for 8 weeks on householder applications, 13 weeks for full applications. Pre-application advice (recommended for anything contentious) adds 4–6 weeks upfront but can smooth the formal process. Rural schemes outside settlement boundaries, or anything affecting listed buildings or bat habitats, can stretch to 16+ weeks if consultees are involved or if the Welsh Government calls it in.
SAB (SuDS Approving Body) approval is required in Wales for any new drainage, even domestic extensions that increase hard surfacing. It's separate from planning and building control, managed by the local authority's drainage team. Your architect or a civil engineer submits drainage plans showing permeable paving, soakaways, or attenuation; approval typically costs £800–1,500 and takes 6–8 weeks. Miss this and you can't legally connect drains.
Yes, but permitted development rights are restricted — rear extensions over 3m (for semis/terraces) or any side extension likely need planning permission. Conservation area consent may also apply if you're altering a boundary wall or demolishing outbuildings. Bridgend town centre and Newcastle conservation areas are particularly scrutinised; expect the council to require traditional materials (slate, render colours to match existing) and sympathetic window styles.
Most architects prepare building regulations drawings and submit them to BCBC Building Control or an approved inspector (private alternative), but the building control body conducts on-site inspections independently. Some architects offer 'clerk of works' services, visiting during construction to check compliance with drawings, but this is an additional fee (usually 3–5% of build cost). Clarify upfront whether post-planning site visits are included in the quoted fee.
Listed building consent is required for any alteration affecting a listed structure's character — new windows, internal layout changes, even re-roofing. Your architect submits a heritage statement justifying the work, often with historic photos and material specifications (lime mortar, traditional slates). Cadw (Welsh heritage body) is consulted, and approval typically takes 12–16 weeks. Budget extra design time and potentially higher build costs due to traditional material requirements.
Difficult unless you have agricultural or forestry functional need, or can prove 'exceptional design quality' under TAN 6 policy. Replacing an existing dwelling is easier (must be structurally sound and residential use within last 5 years), but BCBC limits footprint increases and expects designs sympathetic to the rural setting. Your architect will need to argue the case via a design and access statement; pre-application advice is essential for countryside sites.
Generally yes — Bridgend practices charge 10–20% less than Cardiff city-centre firms, reflecting lower overheads and a more price-conscious client base. However, experienced architects charging Cardiff rates may offer faster BCBC liaison and better design outcomes, so compare portfolios and service levels rather than fees alone. Some Cardiff-based architects happily cover CF postcodes.
The Act applies across England and Wales, so technically yes if your loft conversion involves raising a shared party wall (common in mid-terrace properties) or working within 3m of a neighbour's structure. In practice, take-up is lower in Bridgend than London — many neighbours agree informally. Still, a Party Wall surveyor's involvement (£700–1,200) protects you if disputes arise; your architect can recommend surveyors familiar with CF terraced housing.
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.