East Cornwall · PL22

Kitchen extension ideas that work on Lostwithiel homes

A kitchen extension in Lostwithiel succeeds or fails on three things: island position, glazing strategy, and how the new opening between old and new is handled. On typical medieval and Georgian merchants' houses, the winning move is nearly always a broken-plan layout — connected but subtly zoned — rather than a fully open box. Extensions are the bread and butter of Cornish homes — adding the kitchen-diner the original layout never had, the bedroom for a growing family, or the light and views the back of the house should always have had. Working in Lostwithiel means starting from the PL22 context — Lostwithiel is a medieval town on the river Fowey, formerly the capital of Cornwall, with a strong antiques trade, a Norman church and an extensive Conservation Area, with a building stock that leans toward Victorian terraces and post-war estates.

Lostwithiel sits in East Cornwall — covering PL22 from Fowey, Lerryn outward.

  • Conservation Area
  • 18–30m² is the Lostwithiel sweet spot
  • Broken-plan ages better than open-plan
  • Rooflights over cooking, not dining
  • Typical build cost: £45k–£75k

Local watch-list

The PL22 constraints that shape a extension brief.

  • Watch #1

    Conservation Area material and fenestration controls in central Lostwithiel

Who this is for

Lostwithiel runs the full mix — owner-occupier, holiday-let, commercial and the occasional smallholding — so we scope every extension enquiry from the use-class up.

Local context

Why Lostwithiel is its own job.

In Lostwithiel the planning picture is specific: conservation Area is extensive, covering the medieval streets, the church and the riverside. Listed buildings are very common; flood zone designation affects properties near the river. For extension specifically, parts of Lostwithiel sit within a designated Conservation Area, which means materials, fenestration and roof pitches all need to read sympathetically with the existing streetscape. That local reading is what makes a Lostwithiel (PL22) project different from a generic Cornwall scheme — and is the whole reason we work this way. On Victorian terraces in particular — the kind you'll also find toward Tywardreath — the extension brief always has to read the existing fabric first.

Planning note

Most extensions in Cornwall are either permitted development or a straightforward householder application — but Conservation Area and AONB sites need a more careful design conversation upfront.

What we focus on

Extensions considerations specific to Lostwithiel.

  • 01

    Extensions over a certain proportion of the original house trigger full Part L upgrade obligations to the existing building — worth knowing before brief is set.

  • 02

    Cornish granite and slate-hung walls react differently to new openings than modern brickwork — lintel choice and structural sequencing matter.

  • 03

    Wind and sea-spray exposure can drive material choices on west-facing extensions; we detail accordingly.

  • 04

    Drainage on older Cornish properties is rarely on a clean modern map; CCTV survey before design is often money well spent.

Our process

How a Lostwithiel extension project runs.

  1. Step 1

    Brief

    We meet on site, talk through how you live now and what's missing from the current layout.

  2. Step 2

    Design

    Two or three sketch directions with rough budgets, then refinement of the chosen route.

  3. Step 3

    Approvals

    Planning or Cert of Lawfulness, then a full building regs package.

  4. Step 4

    Build

    Either through your own builder with our drawings, or as a full build by our team.

  5. Step 5

    Handover

    Snag, certify, hand over the keys to your new space.

Typical single-storey rear extensions run twelve to twenty weeks on site; two-storey and wraparound projects sixteen to thirty weeks.

FAQs

Lostwithiel Extensions — local questions answered.

What's the ideal size for a kitchen extension in Lostwithiel?
18–30m² of new floor is the sweet spot for most PL22 homes — big enough for an island and a dining zone, small enough to stay under £2,500/m² build cost.
Should the kitchen extension be open-plan or broken-plan in Lostwithiel?
Broken-plan nearly always ages better. A pocket door or a half-height wall preserves acoustic privacy without killing the sense of space.
Where should the rooflights go?
Over the cooking zone, not the dining zone. Ambient light on the table comes from the rear glazing; task light on the hob needs its own source.
Can you handle the build as well as the design?
Yes — that's the whole point of the studio. One contract, one point of contact, no finger-pointing between architect and builder when something needs a decision on site. In Lostwithiel specifically, we'd start by checking the Conservation Area boundary before committing to a direction.
What about the Party Wall Act?
If you share a wall with a neighbour or build close to a boundary, the Act applies. We flag it early, recommend a surveyor and keep the programme aligned with the notice period.
How much does an extension cost in Cornwall?
Build costs in Cornwall typically run from around £2,200 to £3,200 per square metre for a good-quality single-storey extension, more for kitchen-grade fit-out or complex glazing. We give a realistic budget before drawings start, not after.

Lostwithiel is the hub for these neighbourhoods

We run extensions across Lostwithiel and the surrounding PL22 neighbourhoods — same studio, same site team.

Local proof — Recent extension enquiries from Lostwithiel have clustered around Victorian terraces — we know the route through Cornwall Council on these.

Get a free feasibility view

The best Lostwithiel kitchen extensions look inevitable in hindsight — the island lands where it had to, the light falls where you cook, and the transition to the old house isn't visible.

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