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23rd December, 2025

Christmas Entertaining in Your Conservatory or Orangery | Room Outside

Christmas Entertaining in Your Conservatory or Orangery | Room Outside

Why Your Glass Room Might Be the Best Christmas Gift You Already Own

Transform your conservatory or orangery into the perfect festive entertaining space with expert tips on heating, lighting, and winter comfort.

The Christmas Space Solution

92% of UK households celebrate Christmas, with millions facing the same challenge: where will everyone sit? If your glass room has adequate heating and modern glazing, it could be the star of your festive entertaining—offering space, light, and that magical connection between cosy indoors and crisp winter outdoors.

The Annual December Panic (And How to Avoid It)

It happens every year, usually around the second week of December. You are mentally counting chairs. You are measuring the dining table. You are wondering whether Aunt Margaret will notice if she has to sit on a folding chair borrowed from the garage.

Where will everyone sit? Can we fit twelve people in a dining room designed for six? Should we use the extension? The kitchen feels cramped. The living room is already full of presents and wrapping paper and a tree that seemed smaller in the garden centre.

And all the while, the conservatory or orangery sits there. Overlooked. Possibly storing the artificial tree you have not unpacked yet.

92%
UK households celebrate Christmas
94%
Will eat Christmas dinner
84%
Will put up a tree
2pm
Most popular dinner time

I understand the hesitation about using your glass room in winter. Older conservatories with polycarbonate roofs or single glazing can be genuinely uncomfortable in cold weather. At best, as one industry observer noted, some conservatories serve as “an extra refrigerator” during the festive period, which is fine for keeping the champagne cold but less ideal for keeping Grandma warm.

But here is what many people do not realise: if your glass room has been built or upgraded in the last decade, with proper glazing specification and adequate heating, there is no reason it cannot be the star of your Christmas entertaining. In fact, it might be the best room in the house for the job.

Why Your Glass Room Is Actually Perfect for Christmas

Think about what makes Christmas special. The lights. The sense of occasion. The connection between cosy indoors and crisp outdoors. The magical quality of twilight on a December afternoon.

Now think about what a well-designed conservatory or orangery offers. Abundant natural light during the short December days. Garden views that become magical when dusted with frost or strung with outdoor lights. A sense of space that traditional dining rooms cannot match. The feeling of being connected to outside while remaining perfectly warm inside.

The Victorians understood this. Orangeries were originally designed for growing citrus fruits, but they quickly became prized entertaining spaces. Winter parties in lamp-lit orangeries were the height of sophistication. There was something thrilling about gathering in a warm, glazed room while frost formed on the outside of the windows.

That same magic is available to you, with the added benefit of glazing technology like New Generation Glass that the Victorians could not have imagined.

Making It Work: The Practical Guide

Let us be practical. A glass room in December presents specific challenges. Here is how to address each one.

The Heat Challenge (And Why It Is Solvable)

The key to winter comfort in a glass room is not just generating heat, but keeping it. Modern conservatories and orangeries with high-performance glazing and proper insulation maintain stable temperatures through the coldest months. If yours does not, the problem is likely the building envelope rather than your heating system. The Energy Saving Trust provides guidance on improving home thermal performance, while the British Standards Institution sets glazing performance standards.

According to industry analysis, a conservatory with an older polycarbonate roof can lose heat up to five times faster than one with modern insulated roofing. Upgrading the roof alone can transform winter usability.

For existing conservatories, several heating options work well:

Underfloor Heating

Provides even, gentle warmth without taking up wall space. Pairs beautifully with tiled or stone floors, which retain heat and distribute it evenly. Heat rises naturally, warming the entire space from the ground up.

Electric Radiators

Smart thermostats can pre-warm the space before guests arrive. Many modern units include app-controlled features, allowing you to heat the room remotely so it is warm when you need it.

Central Heating Extension

If your system has capacity, extending radiators into the conservatory provides consistent, controllable warmth integrated with your whole-house heating.

Portable Heaters

Provide a quick and convenient way to inject heat. Works best as supplementary warmth rather than primary heating for larger gatherings.

My suggestion: Run your heating for a couple of hours before you need the space. Glass rooms warm up efficiently once the structure itself has reached temperature. Trying to heat a cold conservatory while guests are already shivering in it is a losing battle, and not the Christmas memory you want to create.

If your conservatory struggles to hold heat, the problem might be the structure rather than the heating. For guidance on whether your roof needs replacement, see our guide to conservatory repairs and maintenance.

The Lighting Opportunity (Your Secret Weapon)

Christmas entertaining happens largely after dark, which means your conservatory’s greatest asset (natural light) is temporarily unavailable. This is actually an opportunity in disguise.

The glazing that floods the space with daylight during summer becomes reflective in winter evenings, multiplying the effect of interior lights and candles. A single string of fairy lights looks like three. Candlelight creates pools of warmth that multiply in the glass. The effect is genuinely magical.

Layer your lighting for maximum impact:

  • Overhead fixtures for general illumination when you need to see what you are eating
  • Table lamps and candles for intimate warmth during the meal itself (battery-operated candles work well if you are worried about fire risk with excitable children around)
  • Fairy lights strung along frame members, wound through plants, or draped over the inside of the roof lantern—the reflections in the glass create a sparkling effect that no other room can match
  • Garden lighting visible through the glass adds another dimension entirely, extending the sense of celebration beyond the walls of your home
One family I worked with strings solar lights through their winter garden every November. They told me it transforms their orangery into “basically living inside a Christmas card.” I am not sure that is architecturally precise, but I understood what they meant.

The Layout Question (More Flexible Than You Think)

Christmas gatherings require different spatial arrangements than everyday use. You might need seating for more people than usual. You probably want a clear route between kitchen and dining area. You definitely want somewhere for drinks that does not require guests to navigate through food preparation.

Think about circulation. Where will people naturally stand with drinks before sitting down? Is there space for children to play without disrupting adult conversation? Can you open up fully to the main house, or do you want the conservatory to feel like a separate, special space?

The beauty of a glass room for Christmas is flexibility. Unlike a traditional dining room with fixed furniture, you can rearrange a conservatory to suit the occasion. Push furniture to the edges for a drinks party. Set up a long table for Christmas dinner. Create intimate seating clusters for Boxing Day lounging.

The Orangery Advantage for Christmas Entertaining

If you have an orangery rather than a traditional conservatory, Christmas entertaining becomes even more natural. The solid roof perimeter with central lantern provides a sense of enclosure that feels room-like rather than temporary. The brick or stone pillars ground the space architecturally.

Orangery kitchen extensions are particularly suited to festive hosting. Cooking no longer means disappearing into a separate room while conversation continues elsewhere. Everything happens in one connected space: food preparation, drinks, catching up with family, keeping an eye on excited children opening presents.

The Orangery Entertaining Advantage

When the design is shaped around the way you host, and the glazing supports warmth and atmosphere, the entire dining experience becomes calmer and more enjoyable. You can prepare food, warm dishes, pour drinks, and chat to your guests without missing the moment.

The thermal performance of orangeries also tends to exceed traditional conservatories, with less glazed surface area meaning better heat retention in winter. Less glass means lower heat loss, but you still get the light from the roof lantern and the garden connection from the glazed doors.

If Your Glass Room Is Not Up to It (Yet)

Perhaps you have tried using your conservatory at Christmas and found it wanting. Perhaps the heating bills were alarming and the results still disappointing. Perhaps condensation streaming down the windows made the space feel cold even when the temperature said otherwise.

These problems are solvable. Roof replacement can transform an older conservatory’s thermal performance. Upgraded glazing reduces heat loss dramatically. Proper ventilation controls condensation. The technology has advanced significantly in recent years. The Met Office provides winter weather guidance that can help you plan for the season.

At Room Outside, we regularly help homeowners across the South East transform underperforming glass rooms into spaces they can use year-round. Sometimes this means full refurbishment. Sometimes it means targeted upgrades that address specific weaknesses. The right approach depends on your existing structure and how you want to use it.

If this Christmas is another year of crowding into the dining room while your conservatory sits empty and cold, perhaps it is time to think about what next Christmas could look like instead.

🎄 Your Christmas Glass Room Checklist

Two Weeks Before

  • Check heating system is working properly
  • Run heating for an hour to test warm-up
  • Clean glazing inside and out
  • Check seals and weatherstripping
  • Address any draughts

One Week Before

  • Arrange furniture for your gathering
  • Test the layout and adjust
  • Install fairy lights
  • Test all lighting
  • Set up garden lighting

Christmas Eve

  • Pre-heat from early morning
  • Final clean and dust
  • Add table settings
  • Position plants and decorations
  • Enjoy your magical space!

Making This Christmas Different

Every year, millions of British families celebrate Christmas in spaces that are too small, too cramped, or too disconnected from the magic of winter outside.

This year could be different. If you have a conservatory or orangery that is currently underused in winter, you have an opportunity. With the right preparation, that glass room could become the heart of your Christmas celebration.

Imagine Christmas dinner with garden views, fairy lights multiplied in glass, the warmth of family gathered in a space that feels both connected and special.

That is not a fantasy. That is what a well-designed glass room offers. You might already own it.

Frequently Asked Questions About Christmas Conservatory Use

Can I use my conservatory in winter?

Yes, provided it has adequate heating and reasonable thermal performance. Modern conservatories with high-performance glazing maintain comfortable temperatures through winter. Older conservatories may need upgrades to the roof, glazing, or heating system.

How do I heat a conservatory for Christmas entertaining?

Options include underfloor heating (ideal for new or renovated spaces), electric radiators with smart controls, connection to central heating (if possible), or portable heaters as supplementary warmth. Pre-heat the space for several hours before guests arrive.

Why is my conservatory cold even with heating?

The most common cause is heat loss through an inadequate roof. Older polycarbonate roofs have poor thermal performance. Upgrading to a solid or high-performance glass roof can transform winter usability.

How do I prevent condensation in my conservatory at Christmas?

Ensure adequate ventilation, maintain even heating, and address any failed glazing seals. Condensation typically indicates that warm, moist air is meeting cold surfaces. Improving the thermal performance of those surfaces reduces condensation.

Make Next Christmas Magical

If your conservatory or orangery is not delivering year-round comfort, we can help transform it into a space you will actually use—this Christmas and beyond.