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Listed Buildings. What is a Listed Building? A 'listed building' is a building, object or structure that has been judged to be of national importance.

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Presentation on theme: "Listed Buildings. What is a Listed Building? A 'listed building' is a building, object or structure that has been judged to be of national importance."— Presentation transcript:

1 Listed Buildings

2 What is a Listed Building? A 'listed building' is a building, object or structure that has been judged to be of national importance in terms of architectural or historical interest

3 What kind of buildings are Listed? Castles, Cathedrals, Churches, houses, milestones, village pumps, bridges, factories…. Any age – more recent buildings have to have a very strong case made for them

4 Listed Buildings in the North East There are 12,270 Listed buildings in the North East 3% of all the Listed Buildings in England Gayle Mill, Yorkshire Wallsend Library Durham Cathedral

5 Grades Grade I - buildings of exceptional interest (approximately 2%of all listed buildings) – 75 in Newcastle Grade II* - particularly important and more than special interest (approximately 4%) – 208 in Newcastle Grade II - buildings of special interest, warranting every effort being made to preserve them (94%)

6 What part of a building is listed? All of it – the exterior and the interior, and anything attached to the building or inside the building – walls, floors, windows, staircases, etc. This includes ANYTHING that is part of the building, whether or not it is original This also includes any additions or alterations made now with Listed Building Consent

7 What does it mean for me? 5.5 million traditional buildings in England £3.8 billion spent on them in 2012 57% of contractors believe that a similar amount will continue to be spent every year BUT getting this kind of work requires special knowledge and skills &, if the building is Listed, consent is required

8 Listed Building Consent An extra control on top of planning permission to protect the building Applies to: Any works for the demolition of a listed building Alteration or extension which is likely to affect its character – how it looks and feels, and what it is used for It is a criminal offence to carry out work which needs listed building consent without obtaining consent beforehand.

9 How do I know if a building is Listed? Historic England website – Click ‘Professionals’ then click ‘Search the Heritage List’ BritishListedBuildings.co.uk – Easier to search! Search by map or by building name You don’t need consent for works to ‘replace like with like’, but it is always worth checking with the local Conservation Officer

10 How do I get Listed Building Consent? Talk to local Conservation Officer for Grade II buildings, talk to English Heritage for Grade II* and Grade I They help you to apply for the consent – you need to provide details of the work you intend to do to the building, with plans and drawings When you have consent, you need to stick to what you planned, and get back in touch with the Conservation Officer if you need to change your plans You may need to keep a record of before and after photographs If you aren’t sure whether you need consent – ASK!


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