4 from adjacent districts — postcode shown on each card.
architect · Dudley · DY1 1LT
Dudley's housing stock — Victorian terraces in the town centre, 1930s semis stretching out toward Sedgley, and ex-council estates around Wrens Nest — creates a steady flow of extension and reconfiguration work for local architects. Whether you're adding a rear extension to a Halesowen semi, converting a loft in Wordsley, or navigating conservation area restrictions near the historic canal network, you'll need an architect who understands Black Country building patterns and Dudley Council's planning quirks.
Dudley sits within the Dudley Metropolitan Borough, covering DY1 through DY3 postcodes plus parts of DY5 and DY8. The housing stock is overwhelmingly pre-1970: Victorian and Edwardian terraces in areas like Kate's Hill and Netherton, interwar semis in Sedgley and Coseley, and significant post-war council housing around Castle Hill and Priory. The local market leans heavily toward single-storey rear extensions and loft conversions — terraced houses often have long rear gardens making side-return and wrap-around extensions viable. Coal mining legacy affects certain areas (historic mineshafts and shallow workings require Coal Authority checks), and streets near the limestone ridge have odd ground conditions. Planning applications go through Dudley MBC, which has tightened enforcement on unapproved extensions in conservation areas near the canal. The Black Country Living Museum's proximity and the borough's industrial heritage mean several scattered conservation zones where permitted development rights are restricted. Demand for architects spikes in late winter when homeowners start thinking about summer builds, and loft conversions remain popular as families resist moving due to stamp duty costs. Fees typically run £2,500–£5,000 for straightforward extension drawings, £5,000–£10,000 for more complex new-build or listed-building projects.
Initial consultations are usually free or around £150–£250 for a measured site survey and feasibility chat. Expect the architect to visit your property, measure up, and discuss constraints (party walls with neighbours, access for materials, existing drains). For a typical single-storey extension, you're looking at four to six weeks for planning drawings, then eight to twelve weeks for Dudley Council to decide (assuming no objections). If you need a structural engineer's calculations — common for knocking through load-bearing walls — the architect will coordinate this, adding £500–£1,200 to the bill. Building regs drawings take another two to four weeks. Full project management (architect acting as contract administrator during the build) costs 8–12% of construction value, but many Dudley homeowners just pay for drawings and handle builders themselves. Check your architect is ARB-registered (Architects Registration Board) — 'architectural designer' isn't a protected term. Ask to see recent Dudley planning approvals they've achieved, especially if your project is near a conservation area or involves a non-standard material like render on a brick terrace.
Dudley Council has three main conservation areas: Dudley Town Centre (around the castle), parts of the canal network, and pockets in Sedgley. Within these, permitted development rights are often removed, so even a modest rear extension needs planning permission. The council is sensitive about preserving Black Country brick vernacular — rendered elevations on front-facing extensions get refused unless you're replacing existing render. Party wall agreements are essential for terraced and semi-detached work; your architect should flag this early. Coal mining checks (£36 from the Coal Authority) are mandatory for certain streets, particularly in Coseley, Sedgley, and around Wrens Nest Nature Reserve. If your plot is within 20 metres of a sewer or near the Stour or Smestow Brook flood zones, expect extra drainage consultations. Street parking is tight in Victorian terraces, so material deliveries and skips require highways consent. For listed buildings (rare in Dudley but present near St Thomas's and St Edmund's), you need listed building consent on top of planning permission, easily adding two months to timelines.
Planning and building regs drawings for a straightforward single-storey rear extension typically cost £2,500–£4,000. If you want the architect to manage the build and certify completion, expect to pay 8–12% of the construction cost (so £4,000–£8,000 on a £50,000 build). Complex jobs — two-storey extensions, conservation area schemes, or structural steel beams — push fees toward £5,000–£7,000 for drawings alone.
Most loft conversions fall under permitted development if the roof slope faces the rear and you're adding fewer than 50 cubic metres (terrace or semi). But if you're in a conservation area — parts of Sedgley, near the canal, or Dudley town centre — you'll need planning permission even for rear dormers. Your architect should check permitted development rights on the council's planning portal before starting drawings. You always need Building Regulations approval regardless.
Standard applications take eight weeks, but Dudley Council often requests amendments around week five or six if they're unhappy with materials or scale. Factor in ten to twelve weeks realistically. If neighbours object or you're near a conservation area, it can stretch to thirteen weeks or go to committee. Fast-track 'householder' applications still take the full eight weeks minimum.
You can, and many are perfectly competent, but 'architect' is a legally protected title requiring ARB registration and professional indemnity insurance. Architectural designers or technicians aren't regulated the same way, so check their portfolio carefully and confirm they have PI cover of at least £250,000. For straightforward extensions, the distinction matters less; for listed buildings or complex structural work, go with an ARB-registered architect.
Yes, if you're in a coal mining 'development high risk area' — covers much of Coseley, Sedgley, parts of Netherton, and streets around Wrens Nest. Your architect or conveyancer should order a Coal Authority report (£36) before you dig foundations or cellars. Some streets have shallow mine workings less than 30 metres down, which affects foundation design and adds costs if stabilisation grouting is needed.
If you're building on or within three metres of a boundary shared with a neighbour (typical for terraces and semis), the Party Wall Act 1996 requires you to serve notice and potentially appoint a surveyor. Your architect should flag this early. If your neighbour agrees in writing, it's free; if they dispute or ignore the notice, you'll pay for a party wall surveyor (£700–£1,500). This is separate from planning permission and applies even if your extension is permitted development.
Permitted development allows single-storey side extensions if they're less than half the width of the original house, under 4 metres tall, and set back at least one metre from the front elevation. In practice, Dudley Council scrutinises these in conservation areas and sometimes insists on matching brick. Two-storey side extensions almost always need planning permission and must respect the 'building line' of neighbouring properties to avoid a 'terracing effect'.
Check Dudley Council's interactive planning map online or ask your architect to run a planning constraints search. The main conservation areas are Dudley Town Centre (around the castle ruins), sections of the Dudley Canal, and parts of Sedgley village. If you're inside one, you'll need planning permission for most external changes — rear extensions, dormer windows, render, even satellite dishes on front elevations.
Builders often have a 'tame' architectural technician who'll do basic drawings cheaply (£800–£1,500). This works for very simple single-storey extensions with no structural complications. For anything involving steelwork, two storeys, conservation areas, or listed buildings, pay for a proper architect. Dudley planning officers regularly request amendments to poorly drafted builder's drawings, which delays your build and costs more in the long run.
You can appeal to the Planning Inspectorate (costs nothing but takes six months) or revise the design and reapply. Your architect should have a pre-application discussion with Dudley planning officers before formal submission to avoid outright refusal. Common refusal reasons: overshadowing neighbours, materials out of keeping with the street, or breaching the 45-degree rule for rear extensions. Most architects will tweak and resubmit rather than appeal, which is quicker.
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.