AndyW
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| posted on 2/9/13 at 04:19 PM |
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Where is best to buy a conservatory
Hi Guys,
Little project for next year is to build a conservatory. Just starting to look at options and want to see if anybody has any recommendation as to
where to buy the conservatory from. Want to build it myself so not to pay anyone for the labour. I have looked at a few on line ones but they are the
mainstream general public ones and seem quite expensive for a self build.
Any idea's? I know the style, sizes etc just need a locost place to buy from.
Thanks
Andy
[Edited on 2/9/13 by AndyW]
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fesycresy
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| posted on 2/9/13 at 04:25 PM |
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I've fitted loads of doors and windows, but never a conservatory.
I always buy mine from a local manufacturing company (Modplan) which has a trade outlet.
Don't let the size of the company distract you, I've tried a few local smallers companies and they are always more expensive.
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The sooner you fall behind, the more time you'll have to catch up.
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Smoking Frog
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| posted on 2/9/13 at 04:31 PM |
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The bay of E if your not in a rush and can wait until the correct size and shape come up. This is how I bought mine. Paid £650 for a 6m x 4m.
Sellers were replacing it with a extension. Downside was I had to dismantle it, but this gave me the opportunity to take exact measurement for the
foundations and brickwork.
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SteveWalker
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| posted on 2/9/13 at 04:39 PM |
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One option if you're doing it yourself is second-hand.
A friend's neighbour decided they wanted a larger conservatory and I bought all the bits of the old one off them. It was 3.5m x 2.5 m.
I re-arranged the door and windows as I wanted them, bought a couple of extra roof beams and panels (upping the width to 5.4 m), putting in an angled,
brick corner (to satisfy the council and also to fill the extra width) although I could have just bought a couple of extra frames from a local
supplier for about £75 each. I also built a flat roofed brick section against the house, increasing the projection to 3.5m (and incidentally giving
me a work platform for window cleaning and house maintenance.
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mark chandler
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| posted on 2/9/13 at 05:07 PM |
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I got a kit from Baltic pine, now defunct, pro was nice wood, cons it was wood so started to rot and needed painting so next time it will be
plastic.
So purchased a cement mixer, dug decent foundations so went down a couple of feet and filled with concrete then laid concrete blocks on there side
which gave me floor joist level (if doing again I would concrete on an insulated block and incorporate underfloor heating and tile) then made the
dwarf wall from celcon thermalite blocks, outside rendered, inside plastered.
It was pretty big, a 5m hexagonal with lean to on one side.
You have to be accurate with heights, levels etc, I used 3/8 plastic tubing with dyed water to set the height, much better than relying on a spirit
level and just measured carefully.
It was great for the first 3 years then the paint started to age
Point to note, make sure you get the roof sheets the correct way up, I mixed up a couple and they turned green and discoloured with UV light.
It was a nice little building project.
Regards Mark
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Mr Whippy
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| posted on 2/9/13 at 05:15 PM |
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Having had both a conservatory and a sun lounge (tiled roof) I'd never go back to a conservatory. Simply because they are roasting hot in the
summer, Baltic in the winter. Very noisy in the rain and roar during hail. Our sunlounge is warm enough to be open to the rest of the house all year
and is really our most used room in the whole house rather than the living room. That little bit extra for a tiled roof makes all the difference in
the world. Great thing to is you don't need a kit, it's just ordinary windows and blocks.
[Edited on 2/9/13 by Mr Whippy]
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Daddylonglegs
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| posted on 2/9/13 at 05:21 PM |
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I got a second-hand one a long time back for a previous property we were in. It was a Wickes own make and I think 8' x 10' IIRC. I
wouldn't say I was much of a builder, but I managed to sort it OK, and I just used the instructions I got online. As long as you get everything
straight on the footings, it's a pretty simple task really. I found it a heck of a lot easier than building the Locost that's for sure
It looks like the Midget is winning at the moment......
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snapper
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| posted on 2/9/13 at 05:26 PM |
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Orangery
Less roof glass, the same side glass and same planning permission as a conservatory
I eat to survive
I drink to forget
I breath to pi55 my ex wife off (and now my ex partner)
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Ben_Copeland
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| posted on 2/9/13 at 06:01 PM |
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Bought ours from eBay. Ex display. £4k conservatory for £800.
High security locks, brown PVC etc.
Like new because it was inside a show room.
Fitting it is dead easy
Ben
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garyo
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| posted on 2/9/13 at 06:14 PM |
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I did a self build of a 7.5M x 4M one six years ago, and got it from one of the 'trade price conservatory' type companies. I think I paid
something like 4k for it but it had a 28mm glass roof which increases the price.
I knocked it down last year and build a proper extension instead. The planning and building regs process really isn't that bad, and I'd
never have a conservatory again - they're unusable for half of the year, unless you have a deep wallet and want to constantly pump heat in to
the thing. You can DIY an extension in just the same way - it just takes a bit longer :-)
Gary
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nick205
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| posted on 2/9/13 at 09:17 PM |
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quote: Originally posted by garyo
I did a self build of a 7.5M x 4M one six years ago, and got it from one of the 'trade price conservatory' type companies. I think I paid
something like 4k for it but it had a 28mm glass roof which increases the price.
I knocked it down last year and build a proper extension instead. The planning and building regs process really isn't that bad, and I'd
never have a conservatory again - they're unusable for half of the year, unless you have a deep wallet and want to constantly pump heat in to
the thing. You can DIY an extension in just the same way - it just takes a bit longer :-)
Gary
BANG ON!
We added a 5x3m conservatory 5 years ago, full height wall one side, dwarf wall for the rest. Proper glass roof with solar reflective film, concrete
floor with 4" Kingspan insulation.
It's utter pants TBH. Way too warm in the summer and it ends up spewing heat back into the rest of the house. Way too cold in the winter too
unless you want to bankrupt yourself heating it.
If we weren't looking to move in the next year or so I'd pull it down and build a proper extension (or live without it).
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AndyW
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| posted on 3/9/13 at 08:03 AM |
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Thanks for the replies!
We had a conservatory built on our last house and it was the best thing ever, used it all year round, never too hot unless no windows or doors open,
and during winter the standard central heating rad kept it nice and warm. That was a 4m wide by 3m projection.
Was looking at a 5m wide and 3m projection on current house. Have seen these pre fab'd bases but they look really poorly insulated so will prob
build proper walls.
Anyone else have any thoughts. Not got enough money/time to build an extension, also want to keep the two rooms at the rear of the house as light as
possible, and I thing an extension would make it too dark!
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