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Double Layer Glass With Frame For Plastic Pvc Four Season Sunroom Aluminium
After the original house is built, homeowners often add sunrooms as an affordable interior living space that extends into nature. There are many different styles and configurations of sunrooms. The best designs work to blend in with your existing structure and appear part of your home, not something stuck on as an afterthought.
Openness and visibility are the two big benefits sunrooms deliver. They’re also affordable, with most sunroom additions being less cost than conventional construction. Sunrooms often use existing bases like concrete patios or wooden decks and have opaque roofs as opposed to solid shingles.
Think of your sunroom as a modern-day porch. For years, American homes were built with front or back porches where families would gather or older adults would sit to enjoy the outdoors while being partly protected. That lasted only until the rain and wind or wasps and bees sent people scurrying inside to watch nature from the kitchen window.
Sunrooms evolved as conversions of porches and patios. As technology advanced, the materials available offered creative uses where outdoor spaces were captured and contained for multi-weather living. Patio or sunrooms are now built of lightweight and high-tech products like:
Aluminum
Structural vinyl
Engineered roof panels
Insulated, thermally-broken glass
Solar-treated, low emissivity (Low-E) glass
Radiant heating and air conditioning devices