Mid Cornwall · PL26

Renovations Bugle: PL26 planning, Mid Cornwall fabric

Cornish housing stock is brilliant and infuriating in equal measure. We renovate cottages, farmhouses, mid-century homes and post-war estates — opening up layouts, fixing damp, adding light and bringing the property up to a standard worth living in. A PL26 site visit comes before a Bugle sketch, every time — Bugle is a china-clay village in the PL26 area, with workers housing, industrial landscape and practical family homes forming the local pattern, with a building stock that leans toward terraced houses and workers cottages.

Bugle sits in Mid Cornwall — covering PL26 from St Austell, St Dennis, Nanpean outward.

  • Rural / open-countryside policy area
  • Plain-English feasibility before any drawings
  • rural policy area experience built into the fee
  • Free first site visit, no obligation
  • One studio — design, planning and build under one roof

Local proof — Recent renovation enquiries from Bugle have clustered around terraced houses — we know the route through Cornwall Council on these.

Get a free feasibility view

Local context

Why Bugle is its own job.

Ground conditions, drainage, former industrial land and simple robust materials tend to shape the design and technical brief. That sets the scene before any design work begins. For renovation 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. It's the kind of detail that decides whether a Bugle application gets approved at eight weeks or stalls in committee. The terraced houses that dominate Bugle (and continue out toward Nanpean) set the tone for any renovation scheme here.

Planning note

Most Cornish renovations don't need planning — but listed status, curtilage listing, Conservation Area designation and material changes can all change that picture.

What we focus on

Renovations considerations specific to Bugle.

  • 01

    Listed and curtilage-listed properties need Listed Building Consent for many internal alterations that wouldn't normally need approval.

  • 02

    Older Cornish properties are often built with cob, rubble or solid granite — modern insulation strategies that work in cavity walls cause damp problems in solid construction. Breathable build-ups matter.

  • 03

    Damp in Cornish cottages is usually a moisture management problem, not a chemical injection problem — fixing the cause is cheaper long term than treating the symptom.

  • 04

    Original fireplaces, slate floors, beams and joinery are often worth rescuing; the design conversation should start with what stays, not what goes.

Our process

How a Bugle renovation project runs.

  1. Step 1

    Survey

    Measured survey, condition assessment, services check and listed status review.

  2. Step 2

    Design

    Layout options, material strategy and a clear list of what stays and what changes.

  3. Step 3

    Approvals

    Listed Building Consent and building regulations as needed.

  4. Step 4

    Strip-out and works

    Carefully sequenced demolition, structural works and rebuild.

  5. Step 5

    Finish and handover

    Joinery, decoration, snagging and documentation pack.

Whole-house renovations typically run six to fourteen months on site; partial remodels two to four months.

Local fabric

Why a Mid Cornwall studio is the right fit for Bugle renovation.

Building stock

Across Bugle (PL26) we work on workers cottages, terraced houses, post-war estates, bungalows, former industrial plots. Each stock type drives a different renovation response — terraced houses in particular needs careful detailing here.

Parish & policy

Bugle sits in the parish of Bugle, which matters for how parish-level consultation lands on a renovation application.

Coverage

We cover PL26 from our studio, with regular renovation jobs also running in St Austell, St Dennis, Nanpean. Most Bugle site visits get booked within the same week.

How quickly can you visit a Bugle site?

Usually within the same week. Bugle (PL26) is on our regular Mid Cornwall run, alongside St Austell, St Dennis, Nanpean. First visits are free and you'll get an honest feasibility view inside seven days.

Request a free visit

FAQs

Bugle Renovations — local questions answered.

Can you renovate and extend at the same time?
Yes, and often it's the right call — the planning, regs and disruption all happen once instead of twice. We design and price it as a single project. In Bugle specifically, we'd start by checking the latest parish-level planning history before committing to a direction.
Do I need planning permission to renovate internally?
Usually no — except on listed buildings, where Listed Building Consent is needed for many internal alterations. We confirm the position before any wall comes down.
How long does a renovation take?
Single rooms in weeks, kitchens in two to three months, whole-house renovations in six to fourteen months depending on size and listed status.
Can I live in the house during the work?
Sometimes yes, often no. Single-room remodels and phased work can be liveable; whole-house renovations involving rewires, replumbing or floor lifting almost never are. We're honest about this at the brief.
What about damp and old walls?
We assess the cause first — usually rising damp myths, blocked vents, hard cement renders trapping moisture, or roofs needing attention. A breathable repair strategy fixes most of it without chemical intervention.

Bugle is part of St Austell

Bugle sits inside the St Austell catchment — we cover both as one renovation territory.

See Renovations in St Austell

Most Bugle renovation enquiries start with one honest conversation about what's actually allowed — and that conversation costs nothing.

Get the PL26 planning view before you draw

Start a conversation
Call WhatsAppFree visit