2 from adjacent districts — postcode shown on each card.
Glasgow's tenement flats, red sandstone villas, and ex-council tower blocks each present distinct architectural challenges — and the city's planning department has firm views on what flies in a conservation area versus a post-war estate. Whether you're opening up a West End tenement, extending a southside semi, or converting a Merchant City warehouse, you need an architect who understands Glasgow's building vernacular and how to navigate the council's sometimes-quirky planning requirements.
Glasgow's housing stock splits roughly between tenements (many built 1870–1920), interwar/postwar semis and terraces, and pockets of listed Georgian/Victorian townhouses around Park Circus and Blythswood. Demand for architects centres on tenement reconfigurations — knocking through closes, rear extensions into back courts, loft conversions that work with Glasgow's trademark Scots-pine roof joists. Red sandstone needs specialist knowledge: it weathers unpredictably, and poorly detailed extensions can trap moisture against the original stone. Conservation areas cover huge swathes of the West End, Pollokshields, and parts of the Southside, so expect tighter design controls and slower planning timescales. New-build work clusters in former industrial zones (Clydeside, Tradeston) where brownfield remediation and flood-risk assessments add layers of complexity. Architects here juggle Building Standards Scotland (not England's Part L/M equivalents) and occasionally Creative Scotland heritage input if you're touching a listed building. Winter surveys can be brutal — expect site visits postponed by horizontal rain — but most practices work year-round.
Initial consultations are usually free or £150–300, where the architect visits your property, sketches ideas, and outlines feasibility. Full design services for a typical tenement extension or loft conversion run £3,000–8,000 (8–12 per cent of build cost), covering measured surveys, concept drawings, planning submissions, building warrant applications, and periodic site inspections. Listed building consent adds £1,500–3,000 to fees and 8–16 weeks to timelines. Glasgow City Council planning decisions take 8–12 weeks for householder applications (faster if you avoid conservation areas), but neighbour objections — common in tenement blocks — can stretch that to 4–6 months. Always ask if the architect is RIAS-registered (Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland); it's not legally required but signals professional indemnity insurance and CPD compliance. Some practices charge hourly (£80–150/hour), others fixed-fee; get it in writing. Building warrant stage fees are separate from planning and often billed as the project progresses.
Glasgow City Council's Local Development Plan designates over 20 conservation areas where 'modern' materials like uPVC or render finishes often get rejected — expect to use timber sash-and-case windows and lime-based mortars to match tenement character. If you're in Pollokshields, Hyndland, or Downhill, plan for pre-application advice (£180) to test the waters before formal submission. Listed buildings (Categories A/B/C) require separate consent from Historic Environment Scotland, and Glasgow has hundreds: Park Circus townhouses, Merchant City warehouses, even some interwar semis in Cathcart. Party-wall agreements aren't statutory in Scotland, but tenement work legally requires notifying adjoining owners under the Tenements (Scotland) Act 2004 — your architect should handle this. Building Standards Scotland differs from England: drainage regs are stricter, energy calculations use different software (SAP 2012 Scotland version), and timber-frame construction rules diverge. Parking/access can be hellish in the West End; confirm your architect's contractor can offload materials legally or budget for parking permits.
Expect £4,000–8,000 for a single-storey rear extension on a tenement or semi, covering design, planning, and building warrant submissions. Larger two-storey extensions or complex sites (sloping gardens, shared access) can reach £10,000–15,000. Fees typically run 8–12 per cent of total build cost.
Usually yes, especially if you're adding dormer windows or rooflights visible from the street. Tenements in conservation areas face tighter controls — slate-clad dormers to match existing rooflines are often required. Your architect will confirm via a pre-application enquiry (£180).
Householder applications average 8–12 weeks, but conservation area applications or neighbour objections can push it to 4–6 months. Listed building consent runs parallel and adds another 8–12 weeks, so budget 6 months total for complex cases.
A building warrant is Scotland's equivalent of Building Regulations approval — you can't start work without it. Most architects include warrant applications in their fee (RIBA Stage 4 equivalent), submitting structural calculations, energy reports, and drainage plans to Glasgow Building Standards. Expect 6–10 weeks for approval.
Often yes, but you'll need planning permission and must prove you own or have rights over the back court — many are common property under the title deeds. Architects experienced in tenement law will check your Land Register title and liaise with neighbours early to avoid disputes.
Not legally, but architects ensure designs meet Building Standards Scotland (thermal performance, ventilation, drainage) and navigate planning quirks — like conservation area rules or attached-property notifications. For £2,000–3,500, you avoid costly mistakes and council rejections.
Yes, but you need listed building consent alongside planning permission. Glasgow has strict rules on matching materials (lime mortar, cast-iron gutters, timber joinery) and preserving character features. Budget an extra £1,500–3,000 in fees and 3–4 months in timescales.
Local architects know Glasgow Building Standards inspectors, understand red sandstone detailing, and have relationships with council planners — invaluable in conservation areas. National firms can work remotely but may lack tenement-specific experience or miss local material suppliers.
ARB (Architects Registration Board) is UK-wide legal registration; you can't call yourself an architect without it. RIAS (Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland) is a professional body offering CPD, insurance standards, and dispute resolution — not mandatory but a quality marker in Scotland.
Architects can mediate by adjusting designs to address concerns (window positions, overlooking, loss of light) and handle formal neighbour notifications required under Scots property law. If disputes escalate, you may need a solicitor, but good architects defuse most issues early.
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.