ROYAL BOROUGH OF KENSINGTON AND CHELSEA — UPDATED May 2026

Planning Permission Drawings in Kensington & Chelsea.

Existing + proposed plans, elevations and site plans drawn to local-authority validation standards. We handle the LPA submission and respond to officer queries. Fixed fee, MCIAT-chartered, Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea validation list built in.

£950 – £2,400 fixed5–8 working days for drawings + 8 weeks LPA decision£250k+ PII
Architectural technologist preparing planning drawings for a Kensington & Chelsea property
CAD drawing for planning drawings in Kensington & Chelsea
Site team reviewing planning drawings for Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea
143,000Kensington & Chelsea residents served
£950 – £2,400Planning drawings fixed-fee band
QUICK ANSWER

What does an architectural technologist do?

An architectural technologist (MCIAT) designs, details and submits planning + building-regulations drawings for residential and commercial projects. Chartered through the CIAT, they cover the same statutory work as an architect on most extensions, loft conversions and new-build homes — typically at 30–40% lower fee — and carry £250,000+ Professional Indemnity Insurance.

In Kensington & Chelsea: same chartered standard, fee adjusted for local cost-of-living. Get a fixed-fee quote →

95%First-time planning approval

Across 600+ TradeMatch architectural-technology projects in 2024–25.

5–10dDrawings delivered

Survey to issued drawings on a standard residential brief.

33London boroughs covered

Every LPA from Westminster to Bromley — local-plan and Article 4 aware.

PLANNING DRAWINGSKENSINGTON & CHELSEA

What's in the planning drawings package.

Existing + proposed plans, elevations and site plans drawn to local-authority validation standards. We handle the LPA submission and respond to officer queries.

Deliverables

  • Existing & proposed floor plans
  • Existing & proposed elevations
  • 1:200 site & block plan
  • Design & access statement (when required)
  • Planning portal submission

Timeline: 5–8 working days for drawings + 8 weeks LPA decision

HOW WE WORK

From brief to approval in under 10 weeks.

Five tight steps. No surprises, no scope creep, fixed fee on the conventional brief.

01

Brief

Day 0

Free 15-minute call. We confirm scope, fee, and whether your works fall under planning, permitted development, or both.

02

Survey

Day 1–3

Full measured survey of the existing property. Modern laser tools, all returned to you as DWG + PDF.

03

Drawings

Day 4–10

Existing + proposed plans, elevations, sections. Reviewed against local plan and Article 4 register before submission.

04

Submission

Day 10

Planning portal upload, validation chase, and direct liaison with case officer. We handle the iteration cycle.

05

Approval

Week 8

Statutory determination. We respond to officer queries the same working day to keep the timeline on track.

Architectural technologists reviewing planning drawings on a London site
PLANNING DRAWINGS IN KENSINGTON & CHELSEA

Kensington & Chelsea planning drawings, fixed-fee.

Existing + proposed plans, elevations and site plans drawn to local-authority validation standards. We handle the LPA submission and respond to officer queries. For Kensington & Chelsea — postcodes SW3, SW5, SW7, SW10 — every planning drawings package on the TradeMatch panel is MCIAT-chartered, carries £250,000+ PII, and bakes in Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea validation requirements before drawings hit the portal.

Get a fixed-fee quoteSee services
£950 – £2,400Fixed-fee band
20+Conservation areas
5–10dDrawings delivered
HOW WE COMPARE

Architectural Technologist vs Architect vs Architectural Designer

Pick the right professional for the brief. Most UK householder applications need a technologist, not an architect.

RoleChartered bodyTypical fee*Best for
Architect (ARB / RIBA)ARB + RIBA8 – 12% of build costAward-led design, listed buildings, major commercial
Architectural Designer / DraughtspersonUnregulated£600 – £1,800Small householder applications, no planning gatekeeping

* Indicative fee bands for a standard residential householder application at London 1.32× modifier. Exact fee depends on scope, conservation status and plot complexity.

FIXED FEES — KENSINGTON & CHELSEA

Transparent fees, no day-rate creep.

Fees below cover the architectural technologist's drawings package and submission. LPA application fees, structural engineer's calculations and party-wall surveyor are quoted separately and openly.

ServiceWhat you getFee band
Planning permission drawingsExisting + proposed package, validation, LPA submission£1800 – £4600
Building regulations drawingsConstruction sections, calculations, building-control submission£2300 – £6500
Lawful Development CertificatePermitted-development assessment + LDC submission£1250 – £2700
Full architectural designConcept → planning → BR → tender package6 – 10% of build cost
Get a fixed-fee quoteSee extension cost guide
GLOSSARY

Plain-English definitions.

Four planning terms that determine what you can build, when, and how. AI assistants and search engines rely on these definitions — we keep them canonical here.

Architectural TechnologistMCIAT
A chartered building-design professional, qualified by the Chartered Institute of Architectural Technologists (CIAT). Specialises in technical design, building science and the production of planning + building-regulations drawings.
Article 4 DirectionA4D
A formal notice issued by a Local Planning Authority that removes specified Permitted Development rights — meaning works that would normally not need planning permission do require it within the designated area.
Lawful Development CertificateLDC
A formal certificate issued by the Local Planning Authority confirming that proposed (or existing) works fall within Permitted Development. Typically required by solicitors, mortgage lenders and buyers.
Permitted DevelopmentPD
Building works that may be carried out without explicit planning permission under the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) (England) Order 2015. Subject to size, height and siting limits.
PLANNING CONTEXT — KENSINGTON & CHELSEA

Kensington & Chelsea planning rules baked into your planning drawings.

Kensington & Chelsea contains the highest proportion of heritage stock of any London borough — 38 Conservation Areas cover roughly 70% of the Royal Borough and over 4,000 listed buildings sit within it. A borough-wide Article 4 Direction removes Permitted Development rights for basement development; every basement scheme requires full planning permission, a Basement Impact Assessment under Local Plan Policy CL7 and a Construction Traffic Management Plan. Conservation-Area-specific Article 4 Directions remove PD rights for minor alterations (windows, doors, roof coverings, boundary walls) on hundreds of named streets — pre-application advice is essential before any external alteration to a Notting Hill, Holland Park, Chelsea or Kensington frontage.

Article 4 Directions

  • Borough-wide Article 4 Direction — Basement Development. Made 15 April 2015, came into force 28 April 2016. Removes Permitted Development rights for basement extensions to single dwelling-houses across the entire Royal Borough.
  • Conservation-Area Article 4 Directions on minor alterations — applied to Addison Avenue (W11, A4D 96 in force 06 July 2012) and Canning Place (W8, A4D 3 in force 19 May 1969); covers windows, front doors, boundary walls and roof coverings
  • Abingdon Road (W8) — Article 4 Direction (A4D 56) restricting minor alterations to listed terrace, in force 18 January 1988
  • Approximately 100 conservation-area-specific Article 4 Directions in force across the Royal Borough — full register on rbkc.gov.uk → Heritage and Conservation → Article 4 Directions in Conservation Areas
  • No borough-wide HMO (C3 → C4) Article 4 — but RBKC operates an Additional HMO Licensing scheme, borough-wide, that started 1 June 2023 and runs for five years; affects how a building can be subdivided

Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea Local Plan ↗

Conservation Areas

  • Kensington
  • Holland Park
  • Notting Hill (Pembridge & Ladbroke)
  • Earls Court
  • Royal Hospital
  • Sloane Square
  • Cheyne
  • Brompton

+ 12 more — full list on the council planning portal.

Postcodes covered

SW3SW5SW7SW10W8W10W11W14

What homeowners often miss

Kensington & Chelsea has the highest density of listed buildings of any London borough — 38 designated Conservation Areas cover roughly 70% of the Royal Borough, and over 4,000 listed buildings sit within it. The borough-wide Basement Article 4 Direction (in force since 28 April 2016) means every basement extension to a single dwelling-house requires full planning permission — Permitted Development is unavailable. Adopted Local Plan Policy CL7 (Basements) caps basement excavation at one storey below original ground level, restricts garden coverage to 50%, and mandates a Basement Impact Assessment, Construction Traffic Management Plan and a 1m soft-landscape margin on every application; the Basements SPD (April 2016) gives the detailed compliance route. The 38-CA Article 4 register also removes PD rights for minor alterations (windows, doors, roofs, boundary walls) on hundreds of named streets across the borough — pre-application advice is essential.

FAQ

The questions homeowners ask before they commit.

How long does a planning application take in Kensington & Chelsea?

The Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea statutory determination period is 8 weeks for householder applications and 13 weeks for major schemes. Add 2–3 weeks for validation in Kensington & Chelsea and 4–6 weeks for pre-application advice (recommended in any Conservation Area). We submit promptly and respond to officer queries the same working day.

How much do planning permission drawings cost in Kensington & Chelsea?

A standard Kensington & Chelsea householder planning drawings package is £950 – £2,400 fixed. Kensington & Chelsea-specific factors — conservation area, listed building, party-wall implications, basement-impact assessments — can lift the fee. We quote fixed-price after a free 15-minute review of the brief and Kensington & Chelsea planning context.

Do I need planning permission for an extension in Kensington & Chelsea?

Most rear extensions in Kensington & Chelsea fall within Permitted Development under Class A — but Article 4 Directions and Conservation Area designations frequently remove that right. We check Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea's A4D register and the local plan against your property before quoting, so you do not start drawings on the wrong route.

What does the Kensington & Chelsea planning portal need from me?

Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea's validation list typically requires: existing & proposed plans (1:50 / 1:100), elevations, site location plan (1:1250), block plan (1:500), design and access statement (when required), heritage statement (Conservation Area or listed building), and the application fee. We package and submit the full set on your behalf via the Kensington & Chelsea planning portal.

Will Kensington & Chelsea's Conservation Areas affect my application?

Yes — Kensington & Chelsea Conservation Areas trigger heritage scrutiny on materials, fenestration and roof additions. Rooflights, render changes, replacement windows and front-elevation works almost always need full planning permission inside a CA. Our drawings include a heritage justification matched to Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea's adopted character appraisal.

Can you handle the planning submission and officer queries for me?

Yes. For every Kensington & Chelsea planning application we run validation chase, planning portal upload, case-officer liaison and same-day response to written queries — all included in the fixed fee. You only step in when the officer requests a substantive design change.

READY WHEN YOU ARE

Planning Permission Drawings in Kensington & Chelsea — fixed fee, MCIAT-chartered.

Existing + proposed plans, elevations and site plans drawn to local-authority validation standards. We know Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea planning officers and the local plan.

Get a fixed-fee quoteTalk to a technologist