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If you’re a homeowner, a PRA is typically required where loft conversions, roof replacements, barn conversions or structural alterations affect buildings with any potential bat roost features. Berkshire councils will usually seek confirmation that bats are not using the structure before works proceed.
For developers, PRAs are required where existing buildings, trees or structures form part of a planning submission and planners need early, defensible evidence of bat risk before determining whether further surveys are necessary. This commonly affects housing schemes, conversions, infrastructure upgrades and regeneration sites.
Early confirmation at PRA stage prevents seasonal bottlenecks, redesign and unexpected licensing risk.
Across Berkshire, Preliminary Roost Assessments are flagged where schemes involve:
• Traditional suburban housing stock in Reading, Wokingham and Newbury
• Estate outbuildings and stable conversions in Windsor & Maidenhead
• Industrial and logistics reuse along the M4 corridor and Thames Valley growth areas
• Woodland margins and river alignments associated with the Thames Basin
Lack of PRA evidence often triggers validation delays where bat interfaces are suspected.
Our Bat Dusk Emergence Survey services are available throughout Berkshire, working across commuter corridors, green belt interfaces and established urban centres.
Berkshire planning authorities require PRAs wherever buildings, trees or structures present any credible roost potential to ensure compliance with the Wildlife & Countryside Act 1981, the Conservation of Habitats and Species Regulations 2017, and national planning policy. Without a PRA, planners cannot lawfully determine whether emergence surveys or licensing will be required. Where early evidence is missing, applications commonly face validation blocks, additional ecological conditions or forced seasonal delay.
If a Berkshire project involves demolition, conversion or structural alteration, PRA evidence should be confirmed before the application reaches validation.
Our Preliminary Roost Assessments in Berkshire provide fully compliant reports accepted by local planning authorities. It prevents avoidable emergence delays, stabilises planning submissions and ensures that any further survey requirements are proportionate and justified.
Where bat scoping is required to unlock planning in Berkshire, a PRA provides:
a legally defensible preliminary roost assessment report
confirmed classification of roost potential
identification of whether emergence surveys are required
early determination of licensing likelihood
documentation structured for Staffordshire LPA review
The outcome is certainty, not escalation.
Proposed works, construction sequence and planning feedback are reviewed to define PRA scope.
Inspection of buildings, structures or trees for roost features and bat evidence in line with lawful survey guidance.
Roost potential classification and planning implications interpreted against LPA validation requirements.
Evidence is reported for planning submissions and coordinated with Bat Emergence Surveys or PEAs where required.
Need to confirm whether a Berkshire property or development requires a Preliminary Roost Assessment?
Submit the site details and confirmation is provided before your application reaches validation.
A Preliminary Roost Assessment is a daytime bat survey carried out by a qualified ecologist to determine whether a building has potential to support roosting bats. It is commonly required to support planning applications involving roof alterations, demolition or building conversion.
They can. Riverside properties often sit within active bat foraging corridors, and roof or structural works may require assessment before planning approval.
Planning guidance for Reading Borough Council can be accessed at:
https://www.reading.gov.uk/planning-and-building-control/
Often yes. Commercial buildings may contain roof voids, plant enclosures or structural gaps that require inspection before redevelopment or change of use.
They can. Detached properties with pitched roofs and loft spaces may require bat survey information where gable ends, dormers or roof structures are altered.
It can be. Even relatively modern homes may contain roof features suitable for bats and require assessment where structural works are proposed.
Yes. Green Belt designation does not remove protected species obligations. Structural alterations in these areas often require ecological review.
Yes. Where safe access is available, the ecologist will inspect loft spaces internally and carry out a detailed external inspection of rooflines and structural junctions.
Yes. A PRA is a daytime inspection and can be undertaken year round. If moderate or high roost potential is identified, further surveys may be seasonally restricted.
If moderate or high potential is recorded, dusk emergence or dawn re entry surveys may be recommended before works proceed.
ProHort provides professional Preliminary Roost Assessments across Berkshire for homeowners and commercial clients. Our reports are proportionate, clearly structured and aligned with local planning validation requirements to support efficient project delivery.