| Click on a thumbnail to see the enlarged picture. | ||||
![]() Edwardian. An Edwardian conservatory with glazed-to-ground frames. Click here for drawing plans |
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![]() Custom Designed. A freestanding twin hipped Edwardian conservatory, incorporating a covered walkway from the client's house. |
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![]() Victorian Victorian Conservatory with 5 facets. Click here for drawing plans |
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![]() Custom Designed. An internal view of a large Edwardian conservatory incorporating a lantern style roof and portal frame supports. |
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![]() Custom Designed. Compound roof with two pitches use to enclose a patio area. |
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![]() P.Shape. A Victorian/ Lean-to P Shape on an elevated site. Click here for drawing plans. |
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![]() Lean to. A large lean to conservatory (with special heavy duty roof) installed on a single storey house. Click here for drawing plans. |
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Double Hipped Edwardian. Double hipped Edwardian conservatory with box gutter at rear. Click here for drawing plans. |
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![]() 3 Bay Victorian A three faceted Victorian conservatory with dwarf wall. Click here for drawing plans. |
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![]() Gable Ended Gable ended conservatory designed to cope with extreme snow loadings on the roof. Click here for drawing plans. |
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Lean-to
with hipped ends. |
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| T
Shape. A T Shape conservatory with a Victorian centre section. Click here for drawing plans |
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| A RECENT CASE STUDY | ||||
| Following
an approach by the client to a Tull & Darch distributor in the USA,
a scheme was drawn up to meet an unusual set of requirements. The flat roof
of an existing garage was to be used as a platform for a free-standing conservatory
to take advantage of a stunning mountain location. The building used a double hipped roof with an entrance porch incorporated in one corner. A lantern section is built into the apex of the roof to provide adequate ventilation in the high temperatures which prevail in the area. To reduce heat build-up and control glare, specialised heat reflective polycarbonate materials are used as a glazing medium in the roof, and these have proved to be very effective. The entire building, which measures 15m x 9m (49' x 29') is built over a steel frame, which actually passes through the garage structure into foundation pads. To ensure accurate construction, close liaison between Tull & Darch and the local steel fabricators was necessary. The photographs below are interior and exterior views of the finished building. |
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| Enquiry Form © Tull & Darch 2000 |