Conservation-Grade Bird Control

Bird Control for Heritage & Listed Buildings

Conservation-grade bird management that protects historic building fabric without compromising architectural integrity. Specialist methods for churches, listed buildings, and historic properties.

Heritage Sensitive
BPCA Member
In-House Falconry
Consent Guidance
Heritage building wire system photography

The Damage

Why Heritage Buildings Are Vulnerable

Yorkshire has thousands of listed buildings. Northern England's limestone and calciferous sandstone are among the most vulnerable building materials to guano corrosion. Centuries of craftsmanship can be destroyed in decades.

Stone Corrosion

Pigeon guano (pH 3.5–4.5) dissolves limestone and sandstone faster than acid rain. The cost of stone repair far exceeds the cost of prevention.

Lead Damage

Guano corrodes lead flashing, guttering, and roof details. Lead replacement on listed buildings is extremely costly and requires specialist craftspeople.

Timber Decay

Moisture trapped beneath guano accumulations accelerates rot in historic timber structures — roof beams, window frames, and decorative woodwork.

Drainage Blockage

Nesting material and guano block historic drainage systems, causing water ingress that damages interior plasterwork, paintings, and furnishings.

Permanent Staining

Permanent discolouration of light-coloured stone facades. Once guano staining sets into porous stone, it cannot be fully removed without damaging the surface.

Interior Contamination

Birds entering through tower openings, broken louvres, and ventilation gaps contaminate interiors with droppings and nesting material.

Our Methods

Heritage-Sensitive Bird Control Methods

Every method we use is selected for minimum intervention to the historic fabric. We understand the sensitivities of working on listed and historic buildings.

Preferred for Heritage

Wire Systems

Post-and-wire deterrent systems are often the preferred method for listed buildings. Spring-loaded stainless steel posts with tensioned wire create an unstable landing surface that deters birds — without the visual impact of spikes.

Wire systems are near-invisible against stonework and are approved for many listed building applications.

Colour-Matched

Conservation-Grade Netting

Bird netting installed using fixings designed for the specific building material. Stone, timber, and metalwork all require different fixing approaches.

Where possible, we use existing fixing points to minimise new intervention. Netting colour is selected to match the building — stone, black, or translucent.

Zero Intervention

Falconry

Hawk dispersal is the least invasive bird control method for heritage sites — no fixings, no modifications, no physical intervention to the building at all.

Regular hawking visits clear birds from towers, rooftops, and grounds without touching the fabric.

Substrate-Aware

Guano Removal

Professional guano removal from heritage buildings requires knowledge of the substrate. Sandstone, limestone, timber, and decorative plasterwork all require different cleaning approaches.

We use methods that remove contamination without damaging the underlying material.

Planning & Consent

Listed Building Consent & Compliance

Installing bird deterrents on a listed building may require listed building consent. We advise on requirements and can liaise with conservation officers on your behalf.

When Consent Is Required

Requirements vary depending on the building's listed status (Grade I, II*, or II), the type of deterrent system, the visibility and impact on the building's character, and local planning authority policies.

Wire systems and discreet netting typically receive favourable treatment from conservation officers due to their low visual impact.

Our Consent Support

We advise on consent requirements during the survey. Where consent is needed, we prepare the technical documentation describing the proposed system, fixing methods, and visual impact.

We can liaise directly with conservation officers to address their concerns and secure approval for the work.

Heritage Properties We Serve

Churches & Cathedrals
Listed Commercial
Town Halls & Civic
Museums & Galleries
University Heritage
Historic Houses
Scheduled Monuments
Country Estates

FAQs

Heritage Bird Control Questions

Possibly. Installing bird deterrents on a listed building may require listed building consent. The requirements depend on the building's listed grade, the type of system, and its visual impact. We advise on this during the survey and can liaise with conservation officers.
Our fixings and methods are selected specifically for each building material. We minimise intervention to the historic fabric and, where possible, use existing fixing points. Conservation-grade fixings can be removed without significant damage.
Yes. We have experience working on ecclesiastical buildings. Churches face specific challenges — tower openings, louvre panels, and high-level access requirements. We provide the specialist access equipment, heritage-sensitive methods, and documentation that church authorities require.
Wire systems are the most visually discreet option — near-invisible against stonework. Falconry requires no physical intervention to the building at all. We recommend the least invasive option appropriate for each situation during the survey.

Protect Your Heritage Building

Historic fabric deserves specialist protection. We provide conservation-grade bird control that preserves your building's character while eliminating bird damage.

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