In London, space is a luxury. And in a city where growth is restricted upwards and outwards, we often find ourselves looking in the opposite direction - down. Not because it’s easier. But because, done well, it can transform the way a home lives and breathes.
At RISE, we see basements not as a compromise, but as a catalyst. A new layer of possibility beneath the surface. An opportunity to bring light, warmth, and purpose into parts of the home that were never imagined before.
But creating space underground in 2025 is not without complexity. So let’s dig deeper.
A carefully detailed basement extension designed by RISE Design Studio, featuring a warm-toned kitchen, natural finishes, and a lightwell with elegant in-situ concrete stairs.
Planning policies in London are becoming more protective of streetscapes, of skylines, of neighbouring amenity. In many conservation areas, extensions are heavily restricted. Rear additions face resistance. Roof alterations are debated. But beneath the ground, space can still be found.
That’s why for many homeowners, basements aren’t a luxury - they’re a necessity.
But we never approach them as just a volume gain. Instead, we start with questions:
→ What’s the daily rhythm of your home?
→ Where do you escape to think, move, or recharge?
→ How can we bring clarity and calm to that space?
Whether it’s a music room, a second living space, or a guest suite tucked away from the rest of the house, a basement has the potential to feel like a destination - not a leftover.
☉ A basement isn’t just somewhere you go. It’s somewhere you feel.
Let’s be candid: building below ground is costly.
Baseline construction costs for a London basement begin at £4,850/m² + VAT, with more intricate or high-spec sites rising to £8,400/m² + VAT. In comparison, a traditional above-ground extension starts closer to £2,675/m².
But cost and value are not the same thing.
In prime London postcodes, well-designed basements have been shown to increase property value by anywhere from £8,500 to £19,000 per m². So in the right context, the financial case is clear.
→ The real value isn’t in the square metres. It’s in what they make possible.
Subterranean construction is more than just digging a hole and filling it. It’s a complex choreography of engineering, structure, and environment. Here’s where much of the cost goes:
Excavation + disposal: The deeper you go, the more soil, the more haulage, the more traffic management.
Temporary works: Your existing structure must be propped, protected and stabilised while excavation happens below it.
Waterproofing: From tanking membranes to cavity drain systems, this isn’t a single-line item - it’s a system that must work for decades.
Structural requirements: Basement walls hold back the weight of the earth. That pressure must be managed with precision.
Ventilation + lighting: Mechanical ventilation and considered lighting design become crucial when you move away from natural air and daylight.
Access + fire safety: You’ll likely need new stairs and sometimes a secondary means of escape.
External works: Lightwells, steps, and garden reinstatement can all push the price up significantly.
High-spec use: Basements often house spaces that need more - pools, saunas, media rooms, wine storage - each with their own environmental and technical needs.
→ Good basements are engineered. Great basements are experienced.
Sustainability starts with certainty. And in basement projects, that means designing with clarity from the outset.
At RISE, we work closely with Quantity Surveyors and structural engineers from day one. We map out risks, identify costs, and ensure the design ambition aligns with reality. This avoids that all-too-common scenario: securing planning only to discover it’s unaffordable.
→ Design without alignment leads to delay. Design with it, and everything flows.
Securing planning permission for a basement in London comes with a unique set of requirements - not just in design, but in documentation. These reports and surveys demonstrate to the local authority (and your neighbours) that your project is thoughtful, safe, and manageable.
Here’s what you may need before you even submit a planning application:
Basement Impact Assessment
Flood Risk Assessment
SUDS Report (Sustainable Drainage)
Geotechnical Surveys (boreholes, soil analysis)
Structural calculations
Tree surveys and heritage statements (especially in conservation areas)
Sunlight / Daylight studies
Construction Traffic Management Plan
Noise, vibration and dust reports
Combined, these can total upwards of £6,500 before a single drawing is approved. But they’re not optional - they’re essential to securing consent and protecting your project from risk later.
Too often, basements are treated as spaces to tolerate - artificially lit, poorly ventilated, sealed off from the rest of the house.
At RISE, we approach them differently.
We use natural materials wherever possible - lime plaster, timber, stone - to create breathable, beautiful interiors. We design lightwells that draw daylight deep into the plan. We install MVHR systems to ensure continuous fresh air. And we consider energy use not just in the building, but in the making of it.
☉ A sustainable basement doesn’t feel like a basement. It feels like the future.
Beyond the build, there are professional and regulatory costs to account for. These include:
Architect, structural engineer, QS: typically 11-17% of the total construction value
Planning application: around £528
Party wall surveyors: ~0.6% of construction cost
Building Control approval: ~0.6%
VAT: applicable to most services
Some projects also require archaeological assessments or legal agreements, depending on site sensitivity.
→ Get your team in place early. A well-coordinated team will save more than it costs.
We don’t see basements as add-ons. We see them as opportunities to deepen the relationship between a home and its inhabitants.
When done with care, they can create transformative spaces: quiet, connected, calm. Whether it's a teenage den, a yoga space, a place to work without distraction, or simply room to breathe - a basement can shift the entire dynamic of a home.
But success lies in the detail: the strategy, the sustainability, the buildability. That’s where we come in.
Can I extend my basement?
That depends on what lies beneath your plot. If your site sits over or near a watercourse, or in an area with a history of flooding, additional surveys and flood risk strategies may be required. Similarly, protected trees or tight site constraints can impact feasibility. In narrow homes, the thickness of retaining walls (which can be up to 700mm) can make a significant dent in useable space. Every site tells a different story - and the first step is understanding what’s below the surface.
Can I build a basement under permitted development rights?
Sometimes - but with limitations. If your home has permitted development rights, a basement might fall within scope. However, the moment you introduce external elements like lightwells, rooflights or railings, you’re likely stepping into planning permission territory. It’s best to get clear, early advice before proceeding.
Can a basement include a bedroom?
Yes - and many do. But it must meet specific building regulations for daylight, ventilation, fire safety, and ceiling height. Planning officers will also want to see how the room connects to the rest of the home, and whether it includes a secondary means of escape. It’s all about ensuring that underground doesn’t mean second-rate.
How much value can a basement add?
In London, basements typically add £8,500 to £10,000 per m² to property value. In prime boroughs like Kensington & Chelsea, Camden, or Westminster, that uplift can reach £19,000 per m² - or more, depending on the quality and use of the space. It’s not guaranteed, but when done well, the return can be as transformative as the space itself.
Will I get planning approval for a basement?
Most boroughs in London have clear guidance in their Supplementary Planning Documents (SPDs). These often allow basement extensions under the existing house footprint, and in some cases, up to 50% of the rear garden area. They’re typically limited to a single storey. A well-prepared application, supported by the right reports and thoughtful design, gives you the best chance of success.
At RISE, designing a basement isn’t just about gaining space. It’s about creating depth – in design, in experience, in the life of a home. When done well, it becomes more than a room underground. It becomes a quiet revolution in how we live. Thoughtfully engineered. Sustainably built. Deeply connected.
Thinking of building down to grow your home?
→ Let’s talk about how your basement could rise with purpose.
→ Email us at architects@risedesignstudio.co.uk
→ Or call the studio on 020 3947 5886
RISE Design Studio, Interior Designers + Sustainability Experts
☉ Architecture for people and planet
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