Stained glass window on a work bench undergoing restoration.
Restoration should be based on strong evidence of how your home looked in an earlier period. © Stephen Barnes/Arts and Crafts / Alamy Stock Photo
Restoration should be based on strong evidence of how your home looked in an earlier period. © Stephen Barnes/Arts and Crafts / Alamy Stock Photo

When to Consider Restoration in an Older Home

You may be considering restoration if a key feature of your home has been lost or damaged, or if an addition or alteration is causing problems and needs to be removed or changed.

Going back in time

Restoration is defined as returning a building or part of a building to the way it looked at a previous point in its life.

If your home's design is of a single coherent period and some known key building element is missing or damaged, restoring it could enhance its significance.

However, restoration itself isn’t always the right step to take. Older buildings often undergo centuries of change and adaptation and this can be what makes them so special. Returning a building to some earlier single period may lose some of its character.

Reinstating lost features

While some elements that are important to a building’s design, such as windows or balustrades, may have been lost in the past, you shouldn't recreate these features simply because houses like yours often had them, or just because they were common of the period.

Restoration needs to be based on strong evidence that your home did indeed look like that in an earlier period. This may require some research into the history of your house.

Get the help, advice and permissions you need

In the case of listed buildings, listed building consent is very likely to be required for restoration work.