East Cornwall · PL31

Loft Conversions in Bodmin

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. In Bodmin, that work is shaped by the place itself — Bodmin is the historic county town and sits on the south-western edge of Bodmin Moor, with a substantial fifteenth-century church, the Beacon viewpoint and a Conservation Area covering the medieval core, with a building stock that leans toward medieval and Georgian townhouses and Victorian terraces.

  • Conservation Area

Local context

Why Bodmin is its own job.

Conservation Area covers the historic streets including Fore Street and Honey Street. Bodmin Moor (separately AONB) lies to the east; Bodmin Town Council operates active input on town centre regeneration. For loft conversion specifically, parts of Bodmin sit within a designated Conservation Area, which means materials, fenestration and roof pitches all need to read sympathetically with the existing streetscape. That's why we treat every Bodmin project as a PL31-area job first — not a generic Cornwall job with a postcode bolted on.

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.

What we focus on

Loft Conversions considerations specific to Bodmin.

  • 01

    Stairs eat space — a loft conversion lives or dies by where the new staircase lands and what it costs you on the floor below.

  • 02

    Cornish slate roofs come in a huge range of pitches — anything below a 30° pitch struggles to give usable headroom without raising the ridge.

  • 03

    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.

Our process

How a Bodmin loft conversion project runs.

  1. Step 1

    Feasibility

    Roof, headroom, stair landing and structural assessment.

  2. Step 2

    Design

    Layout options that respect the staircase, headroom and bathroom positioning.

  3. Step 3

    Approvals

    Planning or permitted development confirmation, plus building regs.

  4. Step 4

    Build

    Sequenced to keep the family living downstairs throughout most of the work.

  5. 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.

FAQs

Bodmin Loft Conversions — common questions.

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 Bodmin 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.

Planning a loft conversion project in Bodmin?

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