- •Permitted-development limits, lawful-development certificates, or a full planning application should be confirmed before design is fixed.
- •Conservation-area, Article 4, and listed-building controls can change the roofline, materials, and extent of visible change.
- •Structural engineering, drainage design, build-over agreements, and party-wall coordination often drive the build route.
- •Building control covers structure, fire, insulation, ventilation, and drainage and should be planned from the start.
- •Large terraced houses are mostly Grade II listed
- •Mansion block conversions need careful scope planning
House Extensions on Queen's Gate
House extension pages need to explain how feasibility, structure, planning route, drainage, glazing, and internal fit-out all shape the scheme, not just how much floor area is added.
House Extensions on Queen's Gate
This page covers house extensions work on Queen's Gate and in the wider South Kensington area — with local property context, planning considerations, and examples of the type of work we deliver nearby.
Local detail we can share
What we can tell you about house extensions work in this specific location — the property types we see nearby, typical constraints, and project examples.
- •Real location coverage
- •Named local landmarks
- •Transport context
- •Audience-specific concerns
- •Historical property detail
- •Strong fit for Victorian and Edwardian family homes with side-return, rear, or wraparound potential.
- •Best where the existing house works well but the ground-floor footprint, daylight, or garden connection is too tight.
- •Useful where a new kitchen-dining-living space is the real goal behind the extra square metres.
- •Works best when feasibility, structure, planning, and fit-out are scoped together rather than split across separate parties.
- •Victorian Terrace homes are common around Queen's Gate.
- •Extension type and size: rear, side-return, wraparound, or a larger two-storey scheme.
- •Structural openings, foundations, steelwork, and how the new structure meets the existing house.
- •Glazing packages, rooflights, drainage diversions, party-wall matters, and site-access logistics.
- •Kitchen, dining, and living-space fit-out level, including services, lighting, and finishes.
- •Local client concern affecting scope: Large mansion flat renovation.
Proof supporting House Extensions on Queen's Gate
Lateral mansion flat renovation
Full renovation of a 3-bed lateral flat with layout rationalisation, two stone bathrooms, bespoke kitchen, and comfort cooling throughout.
Underfloor heating and bathroom package
Two new bathrooms with electric underfloor heating, walk-in showers, and freestanding baths in a Victorian conversion flat.
- •Whether rear, side-return, or wraparound gives the best layout gain for the budget.
- •How much of the project value sits in the shell versus the interior fit-out and glazing.
- •Whether the household can remain in occupation once structural openings and kitchen works begin.
- •Whether the extension should be coordinated with a wider refurbishment of the existing house.
- •Typical brief in Queen's Gate: international residents requirements.
- •Typical brief in Queen's Gate: long-lease investors requirements.
Published Reviews Relevant to Queen's Gate
Published customer feedback selected using Queen's Gate, South Kensington, SW7, and house extensions overlap.
"Converted small bathroom to wet room for elderly parent. Thoughtful, practical design."
"Complete bathroom renovation finished exactly as promised. Stunning result!"
"Excellent loft conversion with full mansard. The design maximised every inch of space and the finish is impeccable. Conservation area planning was handled smoothly too."
Questions About House Extensions on Queen's Gate
Street-specific answers for house extensions in South Kensington SW7.
Need House Extensions on Queen's Gate?
We can scope the job with the right street-specific planning, logistics, and property-fit context before pricing and programme are fixed.