Transform your Long Island home with our custom sunrooms, liferooms, pergolas, and more! Quality Designs That Improve Your Space And Lifestyle.
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You’re not looking for another space that sits empty when it’s 95 degrees outside. You want a room that actually gets used—morning coffee in February, family dinners in July, a spot to read that doesn’t require blasting the AC or opening windows to mosquitoes the size of hummingbirds.
A custom glass conservatory gives you that. Floor-to-ceiling glass brings in natural light without turning your home into a greenhouse. Insulation and ventilation handle Houston’s humidity and heat. You get architectural elegance—Victorian curves or Georgian symmetry—that fits your home’s style and doesn’t look like an afterthought tacked onto the back.
This isn’t a screened porch or a basic sunroom. It’s a year-round living space with the kind of light and openness you’d expect from glass, but with the comfort of a climate-controlled room. You can furnish it like any other part of your home because it functions like one.
We’ve been designing and installing conservatories since before most of Cloverleaf’s ranch homes got their first renovation. We’re not new to Houston’s climate challenges or to working with mid-century properties that need thoughtful additions.
Every conservatory starts with a consultation at your home. We look at your property layout, talk through how you’ll actually use the space, and design something that works with your architecture—not against it. Our team handles permits, installation, and the details that separate a structure that lasts from one that doesn’t.
We’re rated 5.0 stars because we show up when we say we will, finish on schedule, and build rooms that homeowners in Cloverleaf actually use. That’s it.
We start with a free consultation at your home. You show us where you’re thinking, we measure, and we talk through what you want the space to do. Home office? Dining area? Spot for plants that actually get enough light?
From there, we design a conservatory that fits your property and your budget. You’ll see drawings that show exactly what it’ll look like—Victorian glass conservatory with ornate details, or a Georgian design with clean symmetry. We go over materials, glass options, and how the room will handle Houston’s heat.
Once you approve the design, we pull permits and schedule installation. Our crew builds the foundation, frames the structure, installs CONSERVAGLASS™ NXT panels that resist heat and stay cleaner than standard glass, and finishes the interior so it’s ready to furnish. Most projects take a few weeks depending on size and complexity.
You get a final walkthrough, a lifetime limited warranty, and a space that’s ready to use the day we finish.
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A conservatory isn’t just glass walls on a concrete slab. You’re getting a custom-designed garden room with insulated framing, energy-efficient glass, proper ventilation, and a foundation that meets Texas building codes. The structure is engineered to handle wind loads and weather—not just look good in photos.
CONSERVAGLASS™ NXT is standard. It blocks heat, reduces glare, and has a coating that breaks down dirt so rain does most of the cleaning. You’re not out there every weekend with a squeegee.
Cloverleaf homes—especially the brick ranches and bungalows built in the ’70s and ’80s—benefit from conservatory additions because lot sizes are tight. You can’t always build out. A glass conservatory gives you square footage without eating up your entire backyard, and it adds value to properties in a market where renovated homes are selling for $280K to $310K.
You also get design flexibility. Victorian conservatory architecture works beautifully with traditional homes. Modern custom glass rooms fit contemporary styles. We match the addition to what’s already there so it looks intentional, not like a random structure someone bolted on.
Yes, but only if it’s built right. Standard glass turns any enclosed space into an oven when it’s 95 degrees outside. That’s why we use CONSERVAGLASS™ NXT, which is engineered to block heat transfer while still letting in natural light.
The glass itself has energy-efficient properties that reduce solar gain—meaning the sun’s warmth doesn’t flood into the room the way it does with regular windows. Pair that with proper insulation in the roof and walls, ventilation to move air, and a connection to your home’s HVAC system, and you’ve got a space that stays comfortable even in July.
Houston homeowners use these rooms year-round because they’re designed for this climate. You’re not sitting in a sweatbox. You’re in a climate-controlled living space that happens to have floor-to-ceiling glass.
It depends on size, design, and materials, but most conservatories range from $30,000 to $80,000. A smaller Victorian conservatory with standard finishes will cost less than a large custom glass room with premium materials and complex architecture.
During your free consultation, we’ll give you a detailed estimate based on what you actually want—not a vague range. We also offer financing up to $125,000 with competitive rates, so you’re not stuck paying cash upfront.
Conservatories add real value to Cloverleaf homes, especially in a market where renovated properties are selling for $280K to $310K. You’re not just spending money—you’re investing in usable square footage that increases curb appeal and makes your home more attractive to buyers if you ever sell.
A conservatory has more glass—typically floor-to-ceiling panels and a glass roof. It’s designed to maximize natural light and create an architectural focal point. Think Victorian glass structures with ornate details or Georgian conservatories with symmetrical lines.
A sunroom usually has more solid walls and a traditional roof, with large windows instead of full glass panels. It’s still bright, but it doesn’t have the same open, greenhouse feel.
Both are climate-controlled and built for year-round use, but conservatories make more of a visual statement. If you want a garden room that feels like you’re outside without actually being outside, a conservatory is the better choice. If you want something that blends more seamlessly with your home’s existing architecture, a sunroom might fit better.
Yes. Any permanent structure that adds square footage to your home requires a permit in Harris County. That includes conservatories, sunrooms, and other glass room additions.
We handle the permit process for you. Our team submits the plans, coordinates inspections, and makes sure everything meets local building codes. You don’t have to deal with the county or figure out what’s required—we’ve done this enough times to know exactly what Cloverleaf projects need.
Skipping permits might seem like a shortcut, but it causes problems when you sell. Buyers’ inspectors will flag unpermitted additions, and you’ll either have to get retroactive permits (which is a headache) or lower your asking price. It’s easier to do it right the first time.
Most conservatory installations take three to six weeks from the day we break ground to the day you can move furniture in. Smaller, simpler designs go faster. Larger custom glass rooms with complex architecture take longer.
The timeline depends on a few things: permitting (usually one to two weeks), site prep and foundation work (a few days), framing and glass installation (one to two weeks), and interior finishing (a few days). Weather can add time if we hit a stretch of heavy rain, but we build the schedule with buffer room so delays don’t derail the whole project.
You’ll know the timeline upfront. We don’t start a job and then disappear for weeks. Our crew shows up consistently, communicates if anything changes, and finishes on schedule. That’s part of why we’re rated 5.0 stars in the Houston area.
Yes. A well-designed conservatory adds usable square footage, improves curb appeal, and makes your home stand out in a market where most properties are mid-century ranches and brick bungalows. Cloverleaf homes are selling quickly—48 days on average compared to 70 nationally—and renovated properties are fetching $280K to $310K.
A conservatory is a visible upgrade that buyers notice immediately. It’s not like replacing insulation or upgrading electrical—people can see it, and it changes how they experience the home. That translates to higher offers and faster sales.
Even if you’re not planning to sell anytime soon, you’re still getting value. You’re using the space daily—morning coffee, family dinners, a quiet spot to work from home. The return on investment isn’t just financial. It’s the extra room you actually enjoy instead of wishing you had.
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