Daylight and Sunlight Surveyor in Haringey

Daylight and sunlight reports support planning applications across Haringey, particularly on the Tottenham Hale tower cluster, the Tottenham and Seven Sisters regeneration, and the conservation-area work in Crouch End, Muswell Hill, and Highgate. Reports follow the BRE guidelines (2022 edition) and cover the technical analysis, design context, and any massing advice that helps the scheme work within London Borough of Haringey expectations.

Daylight & Sunlight Reports for Haringey Planning

Haringey carries one of London's most varied planning landscapes, combining the new tall residential cluster at Tottenham Hale with the wider Tottenham and Seven Sisters regeneration, the dense Victorian terraced stock running through Wood Green and Hornsey, and the conservation-area character of Crouch End, Muswell Hill, and Highgate. The London Borough of Haringey reviews a steady caseload of new tower proposals, residential intensification, conservation-area infill, and rear and side extensions, with daylight and sunlight assessments coming up across the full mix.

Our team prepares these reports under RICS regulation from our London office at Boundary Row, SE1, with BRE 209 (2022) as the working reference. For larger developments that could affect a neighbour's legal entitlement to light, rights of light assessments sit alongside the planning piece, particularly on the Tottenham Hale tower schemes. The practice has been delivering daylight and sunlight reports since 2004.

Daylight + Sunlight

Using the knowledge we have gained throughout our involvement in projects of differing size and complexities, we are able to apply the criteria within the BRE guidelines and produce comprehensive reports to accompany a planning application.

When assessing daylight and sunlight, we work with a professional team to try and achieve the best outcome for a site, whilst respecting the neighbouring properties’ access to daylight and sunlight. We will also provide advice on how the design of potential residential accommodation can ensure access to good levels of daylight and sunlight.

Services Provided

  • Initial Site Appraisal

  • Daylight + Sunlight Analysis

  • Overshadowing Analysis

  • Sunpath Analysis

  • Assess the impact of existing trees on a proposed development

  • Produce detailed reports to accompany planning applications

How do we approach daylight and sunlight assessments in Haringey?

Each Haringey report opens with the proposed scheme drawings, an initial site appraisal, and a 3D model of the development and the affected neighbouring properties. The BRE 209 analysis then runs Vertical Sky Component for daylight, Annual Probable Sunlight Hours for sunlight, and No Sky Line where room geometry matters to the result for the proposed scheme.

Overshadowing analysis on ground-level amenity tests the 21 March sun position recommended in the guidance. Sunpath studies cover seasonal access where these add useful evidence, particularly on the Tottenham Hale tower cluster where cumulative shadow effects matter to the planning conversation. Trees within the impact zone are factored in where they materially affect the outcome.

A typical turnaround is 2 to 3 weeks from instruction. Calls are answered by a qualified surveyor, and a free initial assessment sets out scope before any fee is committed. This is a bespoke surveying service shaped to each scheme.

I have worked with CHP for a number of years, obtaining advice from them with regard to daylight and sunlight. They provide exactly what our clients require and work closely with us to resolve any issues, should they arise.

- Andrew Ryley , DLBP

Will the London Borough of Haringey require a daylight and sunlight assessment?

Most Haringey schemes that materially affect neighbouring habitable rooms or amenity space will need a daylight and sunlight study to support the planning submission. The London Borough of Haringey does not always request one at submission, but a borderline case is much easier to defend with the report already in the bundle and the methodology set out in advance for the case officer to consider, particularly on the Tottenham Hale tower proposals and conservation-area infill in Crouch End or Muswell Hill.

BRE 209 sets reference values, not legal thresholds, and shortfalls can be justified where the context supports the design. Reports are turned around in 2 to 3 weeks. The free initial assessment is the way in for borderline cases or for early advice on whether a full study is needed.

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Head Office
2-6 Boundary Row
London, SE1 8HP

Essex Office
2-6 Boundary Row
London, SE1 8HP


020 3714 4090

Get in touch.

Head Office
2-6 Boundary Row
London, SE1 8HP

Essex Office
2nd Floor, 10 High Street
Wickford, Essex
SS12 9AZ


020 3714 4090
enquiries@chpsurveyors.com