North Cornwall · EX23 · Cornwall Council North
Architectural Design for Bude (EX23)
We prepare site-specific concept design, planning drawings and supporting documents that give your project the strongest possible chance of consent — and a clear path through Cornwall Council's planning process. Working in Bude means starting from the EX23 context — Bude is the principal town of the far north coast, with a Victorian sea pool, broad surf beaches at Summerleaze and Crooklets, and a Conservation Area covering the canal and the older town centre, with a building stock that leans toward Victorian seaside houses and post-war estates.
Bude sits in North Cornwall — just off the A39; with Truro the closest city.
- Conservation Area
- Cornwall AONB
- Coastal exposure zone
- ✓ Fixed-fee planning packages, no surprise invoices
- ✓ Measured-survey accuracy from day one
- ✓ Same team on paper as on site
- ✓ Local to North Cornwall — not a national franchise
Our process
How a Bude architectural design project runs.
Step 1
Brief and site visit
We meet on site, walk the plot and listen to how you want to live in the finished space.
Step 2
Feasibility and sketch options
Two or three design directions tested against budget, planning policy and site constraints.
Step 3
Concept refinement
We develop the chosen direction into a coordinated set of plans, elevations and sections.
Step 4
Planning submission
We submit the application, monitor it through validation and respond to any officer queries.
Step 5
Decision and next stage
On approval we move into building regulations and tender drawings.
Most architectural-only commissions run from a few weeks for small householder applications to several months for new builds and listed work.
Local proof — Recent architectural design enquiries from Bude have clustered around Victorian seaside houses — we know the route through Cornwall Council on these.
Get a free feasibility viewWhat we focus on
Architectural Design considerations specific to Bude.
01
Pre-application advice often saves months on contentious sites; we factor it into the programme where it adds value.
02
Highways, drainage and ecology consultees can quietly determine an outcome long before the planning officer does.
03
Cornwall Council planning officers expect drawings that respond to the local vernacular — slate, render, granite, timber — rather than generic suburban detailing.
04
Listed buildings and curtilage structures need a separate Listed Building Consent application, drawn at a level of detail beyond standard planning.
Local context
Why Bude is its own job.
In Bude the planning picture is specific: conservation Area covers the canal, the seafront and parts of the town centre. AONB and Heritage Coast across most of the parish boundary. Edge-of-town residential growth is significant. For architectural design specifically, parts of Bude sit within a designated Conservation Area, which means materials, fenestration and roof pitches all need to read sympathetically with the existing streetscape; the surrounding landscape falls inside the Cornwall Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, so massing, height and landscape impact carry extra weight in any planning decision; coastal salt-laden air around Bude drives detailing choices — fixings, render systems and timber treatments all need to be specified for exposure. That local reading is what makes a Bude (EX23) project different from a generic Cornwall scheme — and is the whole reason we work this way. On Victorian seaside houses in particular — the kind you'll also find toward North Cornwall — the architectural design brief always has to read the existing fabric first.
Planning note
Whether your project is permitted development, a householder application or full planning, the route through Cornwall Council shapes the drawings we prepare from day one.
Local watch-list
What usually catches architectural design projects out in Bude.
Watch #1
Atlantic Zone 4 wind exposure driving render and fixing spec
Watch #2
Flood Zone 2 around the canal corridor
Watch #3
AONB long-view scrutiny for two-storey or sea-facing additions
Watch #4
Conservation Area Article 4 directions on central streets
Local fabric
What sets a Bude architectural design brief apart.
Building stock
Across Bude (EX23) we work on Victorian seaside houses, Edwardian villas, post-war estates, modern Persimmon-style estates, architect-designed coastal homes at Maer Cliff. Each stock type drives a different architectural design response — Victorian seaside houses in particular needs careful detailing here.
Parish & policy
Bude is its own town in North Cornwall, with planning history that's specific to the EX23 catchment.
Coverage
We cover EX23 from our studio, with regular architectural design jobs also running in North Cornwall. Most Bude site visits get booked within the same week.
Can you handle both planning and build in Bude?
Yes — design, planning, building regs and full construction run under one roof. For clients with an existing Bude builder we can stop at a tender-ready Full Plans pack instead.
Request a free visitRecent work nearby
Recent Widemouth Bay rear extension specified A4 stainless throughout for the salt-laden boundary.
See more recent North Cornwall work →Who this is for
In Bude the architectural design 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
Bude Architectural Design — local questions answered.
- Do I need planning permission or is it permitted development?
- It depends on the property, the size and position of the works, and whether you are in a Conservation Area, AONB or Article 4 area. We'll review your address against the General Permitted Development Order at first consultation and tell you straight. In Bude specifically, we'd start by checking the Conservation Area boundary before committing to a direction.
- What happens if planning is refused?
- We review the officer's reasons, advise honestly on the strength of an appeal, and where a redesign is the better route, prepare a revised scheme. The free re-submission window inside twelve months can be used strategically.
- Will you visit the site before designing?
- Always. Cornish sites have wind, light, slope and access quirks that don't show up on a Google Street View. A site visit is built into every fee proposal.
- Do you produce building regulations drawings as well?
- Yes. Once planning is approved we prepare the full building regs package — sections, construction details, structural coordination and specification — drawn at 1:50 and 1:10 so the builder and building control have everything they need.
- Can you handle a Certificate of Lawfulness instead?
- Yes — for permitted development work it's worth the small extra step. You get a formal council certificate confirming your build is lawful, which protects you on resale and is often required by mortgage lenders.
Other services in Bude
Nearby places we cover
If you're balancing ambition against EX23 planning realism, our Bude architectural design work threads that needle without the usual drama.
