Nuneaton's housing stock — from Victorian terraces around the town centre to post-war estates in Camp Hill and Weddington, plus substantial 1930s semis in Whitestone — presents particular challenges for homeowners looking to extend or reconfigure. An architect familiar with Nuneaton Borough Council's planning department and the local building control quirks (particularly around the Hartshill conservation area and former mining subsidence zones) will save you months of back-and-forth.
Nuneaton's architectural scene reflects its practical, value-conscious character. Most architects here handle bread-and-butter residential work: single-storey rear extensions on inter-war semis, loft conversions on 1970s estates, and side returns on Victorian terraces in Attleborough. The town's proximity to Coventry and Leicester means some practices cover the wider CV postcode patch, though local knowledge of Nuneaton Borough Council's preferences (they're particularly strict on materials matching existing streetscapes) matters more than big-city credentials. Demand peaks in spring when homeowners start planning for summer builds, and you'll find architects charge £60–£90 per hour or 8–12% of build cost for full services. The local market isn't crowded — most established practices are small (one to three people) and juggle commercial shopfront work with residential. Former mining activity under parts of Camp Hill, Stockingford, and Chapel End means coal authority checks feature in many ground investigations, something experienced local architects flag early.
Initial consultations are typically free or around £150–£250 for a measured survey visit. For a straightforward single-storey extension (common in CV10 and CV11), expect to pay £1,800–£3,500 for planning drawings and £1,200–£2,000 for building regulations drawings. Full architectural services (feasibility through to site inspections) run 8–12% of your build cost, so on a £60,000 extension that's £4,800–£7,200. Timeline: four to six weeks for drawings, then eight weeks for Nuneaton Borough Council's planning decision (twelve if it goes to committee). Architects registered with the Architects Registration Board (ARB) can call themselves 'architect' — always check the register. Many Nuneaton practices also employ architectural technicians (CIAT-qualified) who handle technical drawings competently but can't sign off design concept work. Planning permission in Nuneaton currently costs £258 for a householder application (2024 fee). Most architects will project-manage the planning submission but expect you to appoint a separate builder unless they explicitly offer a design-and-build service.
Nuneaton Borough Council operates a 'duty planner' system — phone on Tuesday or Thursday mornings for free fifteen-minute pre-app chats, something good local architects exploit before formally submitting. The Hartshill conservation area (covering parts of CV10 around the old village) requires extra scrutiny on materials, window styles, and roof alterations; expect eight to ten weeks for decisions here rather than the standard eight. Article 4 directions restrict permitted development rights on some Weddington streets, meaning you'll need full planning for extensions that would normally be permitted development elsewhere. Former mining areas (check the Coal Authority interactive map for CV10/CV11/CV13 postcodes) require a mining risk assessment for anything involving foundations — add £300–£600 to your survey costs. Parking standards are surprisingly strict: Nuneaton planners often insist on retaining two off-street spaces even for modest extensions, which can kill side-extension schemes on narrower plots. If your property abuts the Coventry Canal (parts of Stockingford, Bermuda), you'll need Canal & River Trust consent before planning, adding four weeks to timelines.
For a typical single-storey rear extension (20–30 sq m), expect £1,800–£3,500 for planning drawings and £1,200–£2,000 for building regs drawings if purchased separately. Full architectural services from concept to completion run 8–12% of build cost, so on a £50,000 extension that's £4,000–£6,000. Hourly rates sit around £60–£90 for ARB-registered architects, £45–£60 for architectural technicians.
Not legally, but Building Control will reject poorly drawn plans, costing you resubmission fees and delays. Most loft specialists (builders who do conversions regularly) have standard drawings they tweak, which can be cheaper (£800–£1,200) than commissioning an architect from scratch. If your roof is hipped or your house sits in the Hartshill conservation area, an architect's input on planning permission becomes worthwhile.
Nuneaton Borough Council has eight weeks for householder applications (the standard single-storey extension, loft dormer, etc.). In practice, straightforward applications in non-conservation areas often get decided in six to seven weeks. Conservation area applications or anything requiring committee review can stretch to ten to twelve weeks. Pre-application advice (free via the duty planner service) can shorten this by flagging issues early.
Possibly, under permitted development rights, but several Nuneaton streets (particularly in Weddington and parts of Whitestone) have Article 4 directions removing these rights. Even where permitted development applies, you still need Building Regulations approval. An architect can assess your specific plot in fifteen minutes — many offer this as a free initial consultation. Don't rely on what your neighbour was allowed five years ago; rules have tightened.
Many offer the first hour free, particularly if you've got a straightforward brief and they're assessing feasibility. Some charge £150–£250 for a site visit with measured survey. Practices handling larger commercial work alongside residential are more likely to charge from the first meeting. Always clarify upfront — reputable architects will tell you their consultation policy when you first phone.
Only someone registered with the Architects Registration Board (ARB) can use the title 'architect' — they've done seven years of training including design theory. Architectural technicians (often CIAT-qualified) focus on the technical side: translating designs into buildable drawings, liaising with Building Control, detailing junctions. For straightforward extensions, a good technician is often sufficient and cheaper (£45–£60/hour vs £70–£90/hour). For complex design work or Listed Building consent, you want an architect.
The tight terraces around Vicarage Street and Queen's Road aren't in a conservation area, so standard permitted development rules apply — but party wall agreements with neighbours are essential before you dig foundations. Nuneaton's Victorian stock often has shallow footings (18 inches or less), so underpinning may be needed if you're building alongside. Your architect should flag this during feasibility, and it can add £4,000–£8,000 to build costs.
For anything involving removing or altering load-bearing walls, new openings, or foundations in former mining areas (check the Coal Authority map for CV10/11), yes. Most architects work with trusted local structural engineers and will coordinate this for you. Structural calcs cost £400–£800 for a typical extension. Some architects include engineering coordination in their fee; others add it as a disbursement — clarify upfront.
Yes — most prepare and submit Building Regulations drawings and liaise with Nuneaton & Bedworth Borough Council's Building Control team (or an Approved Inspector if you prefer private). This is often bundled into their service or charged separately (£1,200–£2,000 for a standard extension). They'll also attend site inspections to confirm work matches approved drawings, which protects you if the builder cuts corners.
You can appeal (free, but slow — six months typical), revise and resubmit (another £258 fee), or abandon the scheme. A good architect will have flagged likely refusal reasons during pre-app discussions. Common Nuneaton refusal triggers: overlooking neighbours' gardens from first-floor extensions, loss of parking spaces, materials that clash with the streetscape. If refusal comes despite pre-app approval, your architect should advise on tweaks for a successful resubmission without charging full fees again.
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.