Penwith · TR19
One studio for architectural design in Paul
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. The way we approach architectural design in Paul starts with a measured walk-round — Paul is a rural parish in the TR19 area, with farmsteads, lanes and scattered homes defining its built character, with a building stock that leans toward converted barns and smallholdings.
Paul sits in Penwith — covering TR19 from Newlyn, Truro, St Austell outward.
- Conservation Area
- Cornwall AONB
- Rural / open-countryside policy area
- ✓ Local to Penwith — not a national franchise
- ✓ Same team on paper as on site
- ✓ Measured-survey accuracy from day one
- ✓ One studio — design, planning and build under one roof
Our process
How a Paul 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 — Most Paul homeowners come to us after a architectural design quote elsewhere felt vague on planning — we lead with feasibility instead.
Get a free feasibility viewWhat we focus on
Architectural Design considerations specific to Paul.
01
Highways, drainage and ecology consultees can quietly determine an outcome long before the planning officer does.
02
Cornwall Council planning officers expect drawings that respond to the local vernacular — slate, render, granite, timber — rather than generic suburban detailing.
03
Listed buildings and curtilage structures need a separate Listed Building Consent application, drawn at a level of detail beyond standard planning.
04
Design and Access Statements are increasingly scrutinised — generic templates rarely cut it on sensitive Cornish sites.
Local context
Why Paul is its own job.
Two things shape a Paul application: parish character and policy. On policy — open-countryside policy, access lanes, drainage and agricultural building history all need to be addressed before drawings go too far. For architectural design specifically, parts of Paul 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; Cornwall Council's Local Plan applies tighter tests to isolated rural dwellings here, so design rationale and policy fit need to be set out clearly from the outset. Get that local reading right and the rest of the Paul programme tends to run on time. On converted barns in particular — the kind you'll also find toward Newquay — 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
The TR19 constraints that shape a architectural design brief.
Watch #1
Conservation Area material and fenestration controls in central Paul
Watch #2
AONB landscape-impact scrutiny on visible elevations
Watch #3
Tighter Local Plan tests on isolated rural dwellings
Paul is part of Newlyn
Paul sits inside the Newlyn catchment — we cover both as one architectural design territory.
See Architectural Design in Newlyn →Local fabric
Paul architectural design — the local-studio difference.
Building stock
Across Paul (TR19) we work on farmhouses, converted barns, rural cottages, smallholdings, scattered modern homes. Each stock type drives a different architectural design response — converted barns in particular needs careful detailing here.
Parish & policy
Paul sits in the parish of Paul, which matters for how parish-level consultation lands on a architectural design application.
Coverage
We cover TR19 from our studio, with regular architectural design jobs also running in Newlyn, Truro, St Austell. Most Paul site visits get booked within the same week.
Can you handle both planning and build in Paul?
Yes — design, planning, building regs and full construction run under one roof. For clients with an existing Paul builder we can stop at a tender-ready Full Plans pack instead.
Request a free visitWho this is for
Paul runs the full mix — owner-occupier, holiday-let, commercial and the occasional smallholding — so we scope every architectural design enquiry from the use-class up.
FAQs
Paul 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 Paul 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.
- How long does a planning application take in Cornwall?
- Householder applications are decided in eight weeks from validation in most cases; full planning runs to thirteen weeks. Validation itself can take one to three weeks at Cornwall Council depending on workload, so plan for around three to four months from drawing start to decision.
- 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.
Other services in Paul
Nearby places we cover
The TR19 stretch of Penwith has its own rhythm; our architectural design work respects it, and Cornwall Council usually responds in kind.
