Mid Cornwall · TR14 · Cornwall Council West
Hip-to-gable loft conversions in Camborne — the extra metres explained
Hip-to-gable is the most misunderstood loft type in Camborne. On a semi-detached with a hipped roof, extending the hip out to a vertical gable adds around 8–12m³ of usable volume — often the difference between a poky guest room and a proper master with en-suite. Combined with a rear dormer, it's the highest-yield loft move you can make in TR14. A well-designed loft conversion adds a bedroom, an en-suite and useful storage to homes that were never built with the upper floor in mind — usually inside permitted development and almost always cheaper per square metre than extending sideways. A Camborne brief starts on the street, not the screen — Camborne is one of the great Cornish mining towns, twinned with Redruth as the engine of the Cornish Mining World Heritage Site, with a strong terraced street pattern and surviving engine houses on its outskirts, with a building stock that leans toward Wesleyan-era chapels and conversions and modern development at Tuckingmill.
Camborne sits in Mid Cornwall — just off the A30; with Truro the closest city; 4 miles from Redruth.
- Conservation Area
- Cornish Mining World Heritage Site
- ✓ Adds 8–12m³ of usable volume
- ✓ Best combined with a rear dormer
- ✓ Cost: £65k–£95k built
- ✓ PD on semi/detached outside Conservation Areas
Our process
How a Camborne loft conversion project runs.
Step 1
Feasibility
Roof, headroom, stair landing and structural assessment.
Step 2
Design
Layout options that respect the staircase, headroom and bathroom positioning.
Step 3
Approvals
Planning or permitted development confirmation, plus building regs.
Step 4
Build
Sequenced to keep the family living downstairs throughout most of the work.
Step 5
Handover
Finish, snag, certify, hand over the keys.
Loft conversions typically run six to eighteen weeks on site depending on type, with four to eight weeks of design and approvals beforehand.
Local proof — Our Mid Cornwall workload means a Camborne loft conversion project never has to wait for an out-of-county team to drive down.
Get a free feasibility viewWhat we focus on
Loft Conversions considerations specific to Camborne.
01
Cornish slate roofs come in a huge range of pitches — anything below a 30° pitch struggles to give usable headroom without raising the ridge.
02
Permitted development volume allowances are 40 cubic metres on a terrace and 50 on a detached or semi — but rear dormers in Conservation Areas often need full planning.
03
Cut-roof Cornish properties are easier to convert than modern trussed roofs; the structural strategy varies completely.
04
Stairs eat space — a loft conversion lives or dies by where the new staircase lands and what it costs you on the floor below.
Local context
Why Camborne is its own job.
Camborne sits within the World Heritage Site buffer; mining heritage features are protected and design statements need to address industrial character. Trevithick Road, Cross Street and the Conservation Area carry tighter material expectations. For loft conversion specifically, parts of Camborne sit within a designated Conservation Area, which means materials, fenestration and roof pitches all need to read sympathetically with the existing streetscape; the wider area forms part of the Cornish Mining World Heritage Site, which adds a heritage assessment layer to most material changes. So every Camborne job runs as a TR14-specific piece of work — local policy, local fabric, local builders. Most of our loft conversion work in Camborne lands on Wesleyan-era chapels and conversions, with detailing that has to nod to the wider Redruth streetscape.
Planning note
Most Cornish loft conversions are permitted development — but a Certificate of Lawfulness is worth the extra week and small fee for resale protection.
Local watch-list
Local snags worth knowing before drawing a Camborne loft conversion.
Watch #1
Mining-related ground risk on south-of-town sites
Watch #2
World Heritage Site landscape sensitivity
Watch #3
Tight terraced frontages with no flank access
Watch #4
Older Cornish unit construction needing thermal upgrade strategy
Camborne is the hub for these neighbourhoods
We run loft conversions across Camborne and the surrounding TR14 neighbourhoods — same studio, same site team.
- Praze-an-Beeble
TR14
- Crowan
TR14
Local fabric
What sets a Camborne loft conversion brief apart.
Building stock
Across Camborne (TR14) we work on miners' cottages, Victorian terraces, Wesleyan-era chapels and conversions, post-war social housing estates, modern development at Tuckingmill. Each stock type drives a different loft conversion response — Wesleyan-era chapels and conversions in particular needs careful detailing here.
Parish & policy
Camborne is its own town in Mid Cornwall, with planning history that's specific to the TR14 catchment.
Coverage
We cover TR14 from our studio, with regular loft conversion jobs also running in Redruth. Most Camborne site visits get booked within the same week.
Do you work in Camborne regularly?
Yes — Camborne and the wider TR14 catchment are core territory. We're typically on a Mid Cornwall site at least once a week, so logistics are baked in, not bolted on.
Request a free visitRecent work nearby
Recent Cross Street remodel opened a back-of-house lightwell to rescue a dark spine.
See more recent Mid Cornwall work →Who this is for
In Camborne the loft conversion brief is almost always a private homeowner improving a forever home — so we lead with feasibility and long-term value, not show-home rhetoric.
FAQs
Camborne Loft Conversions — local questions answered.
- What's a hip-to-gable loft conversion?
- The sloping "hip" end of the roof is rebuilt as a vertical gable wall, adding roughly 8–12m³ of habitable volume. Almost always combined with a rear dormer.
- Do I need planning for a hip-to-gable in Camborne?
- Yes — Conservation Area removes hip-to-gable from PD entirely.
- How much does a hip-to-gable + dormer cost in Camborne?
- £65k–£95k for the combined works, including new stair, master bedroom and en-suite. Timber cladding on the new gable is popular and adds ~£4k.
- How long does a loft conversion take?
- Allow six to ten weeks on site for a Velux conversion, eight to fourteen weeks for a dormer, twelve to eighteen weeks for hip-to-gable. Add four to eight weeks for design and regs beforehand. In Camborne specifically, we'd start by checking the Conservation Area boundary before committing to a direction.
- Will it add value?
- An extra bedroom and bathroom typically adds noticeably more value than the build cost in most Cornish markets — but the value matters less than the daily use you'll get from the space.
- Will I have enough headroom?
- We need a minimum 2.2 metres ridge-to-joist before alterations to make a usable conversion straightforward. Less than that and we'd consider raising the ridge, which is a planning conversation, not a permitted development one.
Other services in Camborne
A Camborne hip-to-gable only makes sense on properties with a hipped side roof — but where it applies, no other loft type gives more usable space for the money.
Assess a hip-to-gable loft on your Camborne home
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