Orangery Extension: A Warmer, Smarter Way to Add Space

Modern orangery roof lantern with energy-efficient glazing and recessed LED lighting

An orangery extension gives you the daylight of a glazed room with the comfort of a true home addition. With brick pillars, deep eaves and a feature roof lantern, it feels like part of the house—not a bolt-on. For a full overview of styles, budgets and timelines, see our Orangery Guide.

Why choose an orangery (not a conservatory)?

A conservatory is mostly glass (including the roof), which can swing hot/cold. An orangery uses a warm, insulated roof with a central lantern, so it:

  • keeps a steadier temperature year-round

  • looks more like a proper extension from inside and out

  • works brilliantly as a kitchen-diner, living room or family space

Key design choices

  • Roof: flat warm roof + single lantern, or warm/solid roof with roof windows

  • Glazing: low-U, solar-control glass to retain heat and cut glare

  • Frames: slim aluminium for a modern look, or uPVC for value

  • Open-through layouts: removing the rear wall needs structural steel (RSJs) and sign-off

Tip: layer downlights + pendants for task and mood lighting so the space works day and night.

Planning & Building Regs (quick take)

Many orangeries are possible under Permitted Development; some need a Householder application. Building Regulations will check structure, thermal performance, safety glazing and electrics. Your installer should handle drawings and approvals—our Orangery Guide explains the steps.

Heating, cooling & ventilation

Underfloor heating or radiators both work. Opening vents in the lantern/windows help purge heat in summer; good insulation prevents heat loss in winter.

Simple build checklist

  1. Drawings & approvals

  2. Insulated base + damp-proofing

  3. Walls + any structural steel

  4. Warm roof + lantern

  5. Energy-efficient glazing

  6. Plaster, electrics, flooring

  7. Final checks & certification


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