Mid Cornwall · TR3
Planning for Kea (TR3)
We prepare and submit planning applications to Cornwall Council and, where relevant, the Isles of Scilly authority — handling drawings, statements, validation queries and officer negotiation from start to determination. The way we approach planning application in Kea starts with a measured walk-round — Kea is a creekside settlement in the TR3 area, with waterside homes, wooded valleys and narrow-lane access shaping the brief, with a building stock that leans toward waterside homes and detached houses.
Kea sits in Mid Cornwall — covering TR3 from Truro, St Michael Penkivel, Calenick outward.
- Rural / open-countryside policy area
- ✓ One studio — design, planning and build under one roof
- ✓ Measured-survey accuracy from day one
- ✓ Local to Mid Cornwall — not a national franchise
- ✓ Same team on paper as on site
Our process
How a Kea planning application project runs.
Step 1
Initial review
We assess constraints — Conservation Area, AONB, listed status, Article 4, TPOs, flood zone.
Step 2
Strategy
We recommend the right application type and likely fee, programme and supporting documents.
Step 3
Drawing and statement preparation
Plans, elevations, sections, block and location plans, plus DAS and any heritage or ecology input.
Step 4
Submission and validation
We upload to the Planning Portal, pay the council fee on your behalf and respond to validation requests.
Step 5
Determination
We monitor consultation, respond to officer queries and negotiate amendments where it improves the chances of approval.
Householder applications are typically eight to twelve weeks from validation; full planning runs thirteen to sixteen weeks; major or contentious schemes can take longer.
Local proof — We typically have one or two planning application jobs live in the TR3 area at any time, so the local planning officers know our drawings on sight.
Get a free feasibility viewWhat we focus on
Planning considerations specific to Kea.
01
Article 4 directions in some parishes remove permitted development rights you'd normally rely on elsewhere.
02
Pre-app responses are not binding but they are a strong steer — and worth the fee on anything contentious.
03
Cornwall has more than thirty Conservation Areas and large stretches of AONB; planning weight on materials, mass and form is significantly higher in those zones.
04
Tree Preservation Orders, ecology surveys and neighbour consultation responses can change the validation list mid-application.
Local context
Why Kea is its own job.
In Kea the planning picture is specific: creekside ecology, flood risk, trees and views across the water often matter as much as the building form itself. For planning application specifically, 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. That local reading is what makes a Kea (TR3) project different from a generic Cornwall scheme — and is the whole reason we work this way. On waterside homes in particular — the kind you'll also find toward Malpas — the planning application brief always has to read the existing fabric first.
Planning note
Cornwall Council's planning team is among the busiest in the South West. A clean, well-documented submission moves through validation faster than a bare-minimum one.
Local watch-list
What usually catches planning application projects out in Kea.
Watch #1
Tighter Local Plan tests on isolated rural dwellings
Kea is part of Truro
Kea sits inside the Truro catchment — we cover both as one planning application territory.
See Planning in Truro →Local fabric
One TR3 studio, one planning application job — start to finish.
Building stock
Across Kea (TR3) we work on creekside cottages, detached houses, boat sheds, converted barns, waterside homes. Each stock type drives a different planning application response — waterside homes in particular needs careful detailing here.
Parish & policy
Kea sits in the parish of Kea, which matters for how parish-level consultation lands on a planning application application.
Coverage
We cover TR3 from our studio, with regular planning application jobs also running in Truro, St Michael Penkivel, Calenick. Most Kea site visits get booked within the same week.
Can you handle both planning and build in Kea?
Yes — design, planning, building regs and full construction run under one roof. For clients with an existing Kea builder we can stop at a tender-ready Full Plans pack instead.
Request a free visitWho this is for
Kea runs the full mix — owner-occupier, holiday-let, commercial and the occasional smallholding — so we scope every planning application enquiry from the use-class up.
FAQs
Kea Planning — local questions answered.
- What's the difference between full planning and householder?
- Householder covers extensions, outbuildings and alterations to a single dwelling. Full planning is needed for new dwellings, change of use, and anything affecting curtilage subdivision. We'll confirm which route fits at first review. In Kea specifically, we'd start by checking the latest parish-level planning history before committing to a direction.
- What if the council asks for more information after submission?
- Common, and usually fixable. Validation requests, ecology comments, highways queries and design tweaks all get handled by us inside the application — no extra fee unless the scope changes substantially.
- Do I need to consult my neighbours before applying?
- You don't have to — the council formally consults them — but a quiet conversation early on usually pays off. Objections from neighbours are weighed by the planning officer and can be the deciding factor on borderline schemes.
- Do you handle listed building consent?
- Yes. Listed Building Consent runs alongside planning where works affect a listed structure, including some interior alterations. The drawing detail and Heritage Statement are fundamentally different from a standard planning pack.
- Can you submit a retrospective application?
- Yes. We regularly handle retrospective applications — sometimes after enforcement contact, sometimes voluntarily before sale. Honesty in the supporting statement is the difference between approval and refusal.
Other services in Kea
Nearby places we cover
The TR3 stretch of Mid Cornwall has its own rhythm; our planning application work respects it, and Cornwall Council usually responds in kind.
