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Conservatories

Conservatory Styles

Which Conservatory to Choose?

A beautifully built and installed conservatory can add a new dimension to your home. Our conservatories are available in a choice of different materials and conservatory designs, custom-built to your taste and budget.

With our in-house team of builders, electricians, tillers and plasterers we ensure that the whole process a delight from start to finish with no exceptions.

Edwardian

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The Edwardian conservatory is a clean and simple look with strong bold lines. The full square corners on the Edwardian style maximise the interior floor area and the feel of a room extension. This can be manufactured and installed with a solid roof and roof light windows to create more of a garden room home extension feel.

Victorian

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Style variations can include:

3-facet Victorian bay front has three main sections, widely angled for maximum space. This style is suitable for most properties. 5-facet Victorian bay front has five main sections, creating a period profile with a softer rounded appearance. This gives the feel of more space and classical looks.

Lean-to

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Traditional or contemporary, this style is ideal for properties with limited space under the eaves or an awkward area in which to fit a conservatory. The pitch of the roof is adjustable, so that a shallow pitch could fit under a low bungalow roof, whilst a steeper pitch would match the roof of a terraced house. Often referred to as a sunroom or garden room, lean-to conservatories bring a continental feel to your home.

P Shape

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By blending two styles into one you can create a conservatory big enough to offer two separate living areas - e.g. a dining room and living room. A P-shape is ideal for creating maximum space and a sense of proportion with your house. The Victorian section helps to create the P-shape which gives it is name and can be in either a 3 or 5 panel design.

T Shape

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A T-shape conservatory allows for maximisation of space and gives an attractive design. A central projection highlights the shape and can create a 'porch' effect to the conservatory if this is where the doors are placed.

Lantern Style

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Choosing a lantern style conservatory can bring the feel of grandeur of times gone by. The 2-tiered effect adds a new dimension to your conservatory and the extra ceiling height adds to the feeling of light and space. Lanterns are typically suited to older style properties and are often chosen for swimming pool enclosures.

Gable End

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The gable-fronted style of this conservatory provides a light airy feel, giving it an appearance typical of this period spanning from 1760-1820. Featuring the same rectangular floor space as an Edwardian, a gable offers a good use of internal space. The front panel of the roof remains upright and creates a feeling of height within the conservatory.

Orangery's

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The Orangery is a new take on the traditional atrium-style conservatory. This stunning conservatory style floods the adjoining rooms with light, whilst the interior height of the Orangery creates a feeling of tradition that is sure to appeal to the discerning homeowner.

Solid roof home extensions

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A Solid roof home extension is an excellent alternative to the normal conservatory extension. You can have a room, which can be used all year round - remaining cool in summer and warm in winter. The garden room offers a real alternative to people who may be more inclined to a brick built extension.
Due to the fact that a solid roof home extension has a solid roof it will usually require "building regulation approval".


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