North Cornwall · PL28 · Cornwall Council North
Renovations that reads Padstow properly
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 Padstow brief starts on the street, not the screen — Padstow is a working fishing harbour on the Camel Estuary, AONB-designated, with one of the strongest period property markets in Cornwall and a tight Conservation Area covering the inner harbour, with a building stock that leans toward Georgian harbour terraces and modern coastal homes at Trevone and Trethillick.
Padstow sits in North Cornwall — just off the A389; with Truro the closest city; 5 miles from Wadebridge.
- Conservation Area
- Cornwall AONB
- Coastal exposure zone
- ✓ Measured-survey accuracy from day one
- ✓ One studio — design, planning and build under one roof
- ✓ Local to North Cornwall — not a national franchise
- ✓ Same team on paper as on site
Local watch-list
The PL28 constraints that shape a renovation brief.
Watch #1
Cornwall AONB and Heritage Coast across the whole peninsula
Watch #2
Principal residence sentiment from the parish on new dwellings
Watch #3
Tight medieval lanes around the harbour limiting site logistics
Watch #4
Granite-and-slate vernacular controls on visible elevations
Who this is for
Padstow runs the full mix — owner-occupier, holiday-let, commercial and the occasional smallholding — so we scope every renovation enquiry from the use-class up.
Local context
Why Padstow is its own job.
Around Padstow (PL28), conservation Area is extensive, with most of the historic core protected. Padstow's Neighbourhood Plan operates a strong principal residence policy; second homes and holiday lets face explicit policy resistance. For renovation specifically, parts of Padstow 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 Padstow drives detailing choices — fixings, render systems and timber treatments all need to be specified for exposure. Reading Padstow properly up front saves more time than any drawing tool ever will. Most of our renovation work in Padstow lands on Georgian harbour terraces, with detailing that has to nod to the wider Wadebridge streetscape.
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 Padstow.
01
Asbestos surveys are standard for anything pre-2000 — we factor a survey into the programme before stripping out begins.
02
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.
03
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.
04
Original fireplaces, slate floors, beams and joinery are often worth rescuing; the design conversation should start with what stays, not what goes.
Recent work nearby
Recent harbour-adjacent townhouse refurb hid services in a new internal core and freed the principal rooms.
See more recent North Cornwall work →Our process
How a Padstow renovation project runs.
Step 1
Survey
Measured survey, condition assessment, services check and listed status review.
Step 2
Design
Layout options, material strategy and a clear list of what stays and what changes.
Step 3
Approvals
Listed Building Consent and building regulations as needed.
Step 4
Strip-out and works
Carefully sequenced demolition, structural works and rebuild.
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.
FAQs
Padstow Renovations — local questions answered.
- 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. In Padstow specifically, we'd start by checking the Conservation Area boundary before committing to a direction.
- 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.
- 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.
- How much does a full renovation cost in Cornwall?
- A whole-house renovation typically lands between £1,800 and £3,000 per square metre depending on condition, listed status and finish level. We survey before quoting and don't price by guesswork.
Local proof — Our North Cornwall workload means a Padstow renovation project never has to wait for an out-of-county team to drive down.
Get a free feasibility viewOther services in Padstow
Nearby places we cover
For Padstow homeowners weighing up a renovation, the right starting point is honest feasibility — that's what we lead with, before any drawings.
