Hardwood Conservatories: Long-Term Benefits Over Aluminium & uPVC
The honest case for timber—lifespan data, maintenance realities, thermal performance, and why discerning homeowners keep choosing wood over aluminium and uPVC.
The 30-Year Perspective
When you’re investing £40,000-£100,000+ in a conservatory, thinking in terms of initial cost alone is a mistake. Over 30 years, hardwood consistently delivers the lowest total cost of ownership—outlasting uPVC by a decade, avoiding aluminium’s thermal bridging issues, and gaining character rather than degrading.
This isn’t timber romanticism. It’s engineering reality, backed by decades of evidence from installations across the South East. Here’s why the material that’s been used for centuries remains the smart choice for discerning homeowners.
Hardwood Conservatory Facts at a Glance
- Typical lifespan: 40-60+ years (vs 20-30 years uPVC, 25-35 years aluminium)
- Thermal conductivity: 0.13 W/mK (vs 160 W/mK aluminium, 0.19 W/mK uPVC)
- Maintenance cycle: Full recoat every 8-12 years (modern microporous finishes)
- Maintenance cost: £800-£2,000 per treatment cycle
- Property value impact: Adds 5-10% (vs 3-5% for uPVC)
- Best species: Sapele, Accoya, Oak, Meranti (each with distinct advantages)
- Warranty available: 25-30 years (frame), 50 years (Accoya)
The Thermal Performance Advantage
This is where hardwood’s superiority becomes impossible to ignore. Timber is a natural insulator; aluminium is a natural conductor. The numbers tell the story clearly.
| Material | Thermal Conductivity (W/mK) | What This Means |
|---|---|---|
| HardwoodBEST | 0.13 | Excellent natural insulator |
| uPVC | 0.19 | Good insulator (cellular structure) |
| Aluminium | 160 | Conducts heat 1,200x faster than timber |
That’s not a typo. Aluminium conducts heat over 1,200 times faster than hardwood. This is why aluminium frames require thermal breaks—plastic inserts that interrupt the metal to reduce heat transfer. Even with thermal breaks, aluminium frames achieve U-values of around 1.6-2.4 W/m²K, while well-designed timber frames achieve 1.2-1.6 W/m²K.
What This Means in Practice
In a conservatory with significant glass area, the frame’s thermal performance matters more than you might expect. On cold winter mornings, aluminium frames can suffer condensation as the cold external surface cools the internal face. Timber frames stay warmer to the touch and rarely show condensation on the frame itself.
In summer, the reverse applies. Aluminium heats up rapidly in direct sun—you can feel this by touching the frame. Timber absorbs and releases heat more gradually, contributing to a more stable internal environment.
The Hidden Energy Cost
A conservatory with poor thermal performance costs you twice: higher heating bills in winter, and potentially uncomfortable conditions that limit how much you actually use the space.
We’ve seen homeowners abandon conservatories for six months of the year because they’re too cold in winter and too hot in summer. A well-designed hardwood conservatory with appropriate glazing specification should be comfortable year-round—genuinely extending your living space rather than creating a seasonal room.
Timber Species Compared: Choosing the Right Wood
Not all timber is equal. The species you choose affects durability, maintenance requirements, appearance, cost, and environmental credentials. Here are the four species we work with most frequently, each with distinct characteristics.
Sapele
- African hardwood with rich, mahogany-like colour
- Excellent dimensional stability
- Natural durability class 2-3 (25-40 year ground contact)
- Takes stain and paint exceptionally well
- FSC-certified sources available
- Best balance of quality and cost
Accoya
- Modified softwood (acetylated radiata pine)
- Exceptional dimensional stability (minimal movement)
- Durability class 1 (50+ year ground contact)
- 50-year manufacturer warranty
- Sustainably sourced (Cradle to Cradle Gold)
- Paint lasts 2x longer than on standard timber
European Oak
- The classic choice for period properties
- Beautiful natural grain, ages gracefully
- Durability class 2 (30-50 year ground contact)
- Often left natural or lightly oiled
- Higher movement than sapele (needs careful detailing)
- Premium investment, exceptional resale appeal
Meranti
- South East Asian hardwood, affordable option
- Good workability, readily available
- Durability class 3-4 (moderate, needs good finish)
- More movement than sapele, needs more attention
- Requires more frequent maintenance than premium species
- Lowest upfront cost for timber conservatory
Our Recommendation: Sapele for Most Projects
For most homeowners, sapele offers the optimal balance of durability, stability, aesthetics, and value. It’s what we install most frequently across our Hampshire projects and throughout the South East.
Choose Accoya if you want the absolute best performance and longest warranty, particularly for coastal or exposed locations, or if you prefer a painted finish that will last significantly longer between recoats.
Choose Oak for period properties where authenticity matters, or where you want the timber to be a design feature in its own right with a natural finish.
The 30-Year Lifespan Comparison
This is where the real economics of frame materials become clear. Initial purchase price is just one factor—what happens over three decades of ownership tells the complete story.
| Factor | Hardwood | Aluminium | uPVC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Expected Lifespan | 40-60+ yearsBEST | 25-35 years | 20-30 years |
| Typical Initial Cost | £45,000-£90,000 | £40,000-£80,000 | £25,000-£50,000 |
| Maintenance Over 30 Years | £3,000-£6,000 (3-4 recoats) | £500-£1,500 (cleaning) | £500-£1,500 (cleaning) |
| Likely Replacement Needed? | No—frame outlasts 30 years | Possibly (seals, hardware) | Likely (discolouration, warping) |
| 30-Year Total Cost | £48,000-£96,000 | £40,000-£95,000* | £35,000-£80,000* |
| Condition at Year 30 | Excellent (character added) | Good (may need seals) | Fair (faded, may be brittle) |
| Property Value Impact | +5-10%BEST | +4-7% | +3-5% |
*Aluminium and uPVC figures include potential partial or full replacement within 30 years. Actual costs depend heavily on quality of original installation and environmental factors.
What Happens at Year 25-30
This is when the material choices really reveal themselves:
- Quality hardwood at 30 years: Has been recoated 3-4 times, possibly needs some minor repairs, but frame remains structurally sound. May have developed an attractive patina. Can continue for another 20-30 years with ongoing maintenance.
- Aluminium at 30 years: Frame itself usually sound, but seals, gaskets, and hardware may be failing. Thermal break technology may be outdated. Powder coating may be chalking. Cost of comprehensive refurbishment may approach 40-50% of replacement.
- uPVC at 30 years: Likely showing significant discolouration (yellowing or greying). Plastic becoming brittle, especially on south-facing elevations. Seals degraded. Internal reinforcement may be corroding. Often reaches end of economic life.
The Repair vs Replace Reality
Here’s a crucial difference often overlooked: timber can be repaired; uPVC and aluminium typically cannot.
A damaged timber section can be cut out and replaced, a rotten patch can be consolidated with wood hardener and filler, a worn finish can be sanded and recoated. The frame is a living system that can be maintained indefinitely.
A damaged uPVC profile or dented aluminium section usually means replacing the entire frame element—often impractical and expensive, leading to premature whole-structure replacement.
Maintenance: The Reality vs the Myth
The biggest objection to timber conservatories is maintenance. “I don’t want to be painting it every year,” homeowners say. The good news: modern timber finishes have transformed maintenance requirements. The bad news: maintenance isn’t zero—timber does need attention that uPVC and aluminium don’t.
Let’s be completely honest about what’s involved.
Modern Microporous Finishes
The old paints that cracked, peeled, and blistered are largely obsolete. Modern microporous finishes (brands like Sikkens, Teknos, and Rubio Monocoat) work with the wood rather than against it:
- Allow moisture vapour to escape (no blistering)
- Flex with timber’s natural movement (no cracking)
- Fade gradually rather than peeling (easier recoating)
- Can often be recoated without full stripping
Annual Inspection
Light Maintenance
Full Recoat
What Each Level Involves
Annual Inspection (30 minutes)
Walk around, look for any obvious issues: cracking finish, water staining, damage from impacts. Check drainage channels are clear. Clean any accumulated dirt from corners. This is no more than you’d do for any external element of your home.
Light Maintenance (Every 3-5 Years)
Clean thoroughly with appropriate timber cleaner. Touch up any areas where finish is wearing thin (typically lower rails and sills that get most weather exposure). Oil any moving parts. Most homeowners handle this themselves over a weekend.
Full Recoat (Every 8-12 Years)
Lightly sand to key the surface, apply fresh coats of finish. On a standard conservatory, a professional will complete this in 2-3 days. Interior surfaces rarely need attention beyond cleaning.
Accoya: The Low-Maintenance Timber Option
If maintenance concerns are a significant factor for you, consider Accoya. Its exceptional dimensional stability means paint adheres better and lasts longer—typically 2x the recoat interval of standard timber. The 50-year warranty provides peace of mind that the underlying wood will perform regardless of finish condition.
The premium (typically 15-25% over sapele) pays for itself in reduced maintenance frequency over the conservatory’s lifetime.
Hardwood vs Aluminium: The Full Comparison
Many homeowners weighing up timber conservatories consider aluminium as the main alternative—particularly for contemporary designs. Here’s how they genuinely compare.
| Factor | Hardwood | Aluminium |
|---|---|---|
| Aesthetic Warmth | Natural, warm, tactileBEST | Contemporary, industrial |
| Thermal Performance | Superior (0.13 W/mK)BEST | Requires thermal breaks |
| Condensation Risk | LowBEST | Higher (cold bridging) |
| Colour Options | Unlimited (can change)BEST | RAL colours (permanent) |
| Slim Sightlines | 45-70mm typical | 30-50mm possibleBEST |
| Maintenance Required | Recoat every 8-12 years | Minimal (cleaning)BEST |
| Repairability | ExcellentBEST | Limited (replace sections) |
| Period Property Suitability | ExcellentBEST | Often inappropriate |
| Environmental Impact | Low (carbon store)BEST | High (energy-intensive) |
| Cost Range | £45,000-£90,000 | £40,000-£80,000 |
When Aluminium Makes Sense
We install aluminium systems too—they’re right for certain projects:
- Ultra-contemporary homes where an industrial aesthetic is desired
- Projects where the absolute slimmest sightlines are essential
- Clients who genuinely won’t maintain timber (honest self-assessment)
- Coastal locations with extreme salt exposure (though Accoya also excels here)
When Hardwood Wins
- Period properties (Georgian, Victorian, Edwardian, Arts & Crafts)
- Rural settings where natural materials suit the context
- Homeowners wanting optimal thermal comfort
- Projects where character and craftsmanship matter
- Anyone planning to stay long-term (10+ years)
For deeper insights on what separates standard from exceptional, see our guide to what makes a conservatory truly luxurious.
Hardwood vs uPVC: Beyond the Price Tag
uPVC remains the volume choice for conservatories—primarily because of cost. But the comparison deserves honest examination beyond just the initial price.
| Factor | Hardwood | uPVC |
|---|---|---|
| Lifespan | 40-60+ yearsBEST | 20-30 years |
| Aesthetic Quality | Premium, naturalBEST | Synthetic appearance |
| Thermal Performance | ExcellentBEST | Good |
| Structural Integrity | ExcellentBEST | Adequate (steel reinforced) |
| UV Stability | Excellent (with finish)BEST | Degrades over time |
| Colour Longevity | Renewable indefinitelyBEST | Fades, cannot refresh |
| Environmental | Carbon negativeBEST | Petroleum-based plastic |
| Resale Value Added | 5-10%BEST | 3-5% |
| Upfront Cost | £45,000-£90,000 | £25,000-£50,000BEST |
| Maintenance Required | Periodic recoating | MinimalBEST |
The honest summary: if initial budget is the primary constraint and you’re not planning to stay long-term, uPVC delivers adequate performance at lower cost. If you’re investing for the long term, care about aesthetics and environmental impact, and want a conservatory that adds genuine value to your home, hardwood justifies its premium many times over.
The Environmental Case for Timber
In an era of increasing environmental awareness, timber’s credentials deserve attention. This isn’t greenwashing—the numbers are significant.
Carbon Storage
Timber is literally stored carbon. A typical hardwood conservatory frame contains approximately 500-800kg of wood, representing around 900-1,400kg of CO₂ sequestered from the atmosphere during the tree’s growth. This carbon remains locked up for the frame’s entire lifetime.
Compare this to aluminium, which requires enormous energy to produce (around 14kWh per kg), releasing substantial CO₂ in the process. Or uPVC, derived from petroleum and requiring energy-intensive manufacturing.
Sustainable Sourcing
All timber we use comes from certified sustainable sources (FSC or PEFC). These certification schemes ensure:
- Forests are replanted and managed for long-term productivity
- Biodiversity is protected
- Local communities benefit fairly
- Full chain of custody from forest to fabrication
Accoya goes further with Cradle to Cradle Gold certification, representing the highest standard of sustainable production.
End of Life
When a timber conservatory eventually reaches the end of its useful life—potentially 60+ years away—the wood can be recycled, repurposed, or will biodegrade naturally. It doesn’t persist in landfill for centuries like uPVC, and doesn’t require energy-intensive recycling like aluminium.
What to Expect: The Journey to Your Hardwood Conservatory
A bespoke hardwood conservatory is a significant undertaking—typically 4-8 months from initial consultation to completion. Here’s what that process typically involves.
Design & Planning
Initial consultation, site survey, design development, species selection, finish choices. Planning application submitted if required.
Approvals & Detailing
Planning permission granted (if needed), Building Regulations application, structural engineering, detailed manufacturing drawings.
Manufacturing
Your conservatory is crafted in our workshop. Timber is carefully selected, machined, assembled, and finished. Glazing units ordered.
Installation
Groundworks and base construction (1-2 weeks), frame erection (1-2 weeks), glazing and roofing (1 week), internal finishing (1-2 weeks).
Completion
Final decoration, snagging, Building Control sign-off, handover with maintenance guidance.
The timeline reflects the care that goes into a properly crafted hardwood conservatory. Companies promising significantly faster delivery may be using lower-quality timber, simpler joinery, or skipping important steps.
Investment Levels for Hardwood Conservatories
Hardwood conservatory prices vary significantly based on size, species, complexity, and specification. Here’s what to expect in 2026:
| Size/Type | Meranti | Sapele | Accoya/Oak |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small (12-16m²) | £35,000-£50,000 | £45,000-£60,000 | £55,000-£75,000 |
| Medium (16-25m²) | £50,000-£70,000 | £60,000-£85,000 | £75,000-£105,000 |
| Large (25-35m²) | £70,000-£95,000 | £85,000-£115,000 | £105,000-£145,000 |
| Orangery style | +15-25% | +15-25% | +15-25% |
These figures include design, planning support, manufacture, installation, and a 10-year workmanship warranty. They represent genuine market rates for quality work—not the lowest quotes you might find, but not inflated either.
Explore our full range of hardwood conservatory designs to see what’s possible at different investment levels.
Hardwood Conservatory Resources: Expert Guides & Inspiration
About This Guide
Performance data in this guide is based on industry research, manufacturer specifications, and Room Outside’s 50+ years of experience installing and maintaining timber conservatories. Timber durability classifications follow EN 350 standards. Lifespan estimates assume proper installation and maintenance.
Last updated: March 2026 | Author: Room Outside
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does a hardwood conservatory last?
A well-built hardwood conservatory typically lasts 40-60 years or more with proper maintenance. Premium species like accoya and oak can exceed 50 years. Compare this to 25-35 years for aluminium and 20-30 years for uPVC. The frame itself often outlasts glazing seals and hardware, which can be replaced.
Is hardwood better than aluminium for a conservatory?
Hardwood offers superior thermal performance with natural insulating properties, avoiding the thermal bridging issues of aluminium. Timber is warmer to touch, easier to repair, and develops character over time. Aluminium requires less maintenance but may need complete replacement sooner. Over 30 years, hardwood typically delivers better value.
What is the best wood for a conservatory?
The best woods for conservatories are sapele, accoya, oak, and meranti. Sapele offers excellent durability and workability at a reasonable price—our most popular choice. Accoya is modified softwood with exceptional stability and a 50-year warranty. Oak is the premium choice for period properties. Meranti is budget-friendly but requires more maintenance.
How much maintenance does a hardwood conservatory need?
Modern factory-finished hardwood conservatories need recoating every 8-12 years externally, with light maintenance every 3-5 years. This typically costs £800-£2,000 per treatment. Internal surfaces rarely need attention beyond cleaning. Modern microporous finishes make maintenance far easier than traditional paints.
Are hardwood conservatories more expensive than uPVC?
Yes, hardwood conservatories cost 40-80% more than equivalent uPVC upfront. However, over 30 years the total cost of ownership is often lower due to longer lifespan, better energy efficiency, and the ability to refurbish rather than replace. Hardwood also adds more value to your property—typically 5-10% vs 3-5% for uPVC.
What is accoya and why is it good for conservatories?
Accoya is sustainably sourced softwood that has been acetylated—a process that modifies the wood at molecular level for exceptional stability and durability. It doesn’t swell, shrink or warp, resists rot for 50+ years, and takes paint beautifully. It combines the workability of softwood with performance exceeding most hardwoods.
Does a hardwood conservatory add value to my home?
Yes, a quality hardwood conservatory typically adds 5-10% to property value, compared to 3-5% for uPVC. Estate agents report that timber conservatories are a selling feature, particularly on period and premium properties. The natural aesthetic and longevity appeal to discerning buyers.
Can hardwood conservatories be painted any colour?
Yes, hardwood conservatories can be painted or stained any colour using microporous exterior wood finishes. Popular choices include white, cream, grey, and heritage colours. The finish can be changed over time—unlike uPVC. Internal and external surfaces can be different colours to complement your interior and exterior schemes.
Call us anytime – David, our digital assistant, will take a few details so the right specialist can follow up personally. 01243 538999 or request a consultation online
Ready to Explore Hardwood Conservatories?
From classic Victorian designs in oak to contemporary spaces in sapele or accoya, we’ll help you choose the right timber species, style, and specification for your home. Fifty years of craftsmanship, one conversation to start.
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Room Outside: Hardwood conservatory craftsmen since 1973.
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