
Service
Verandas
Verandas and glass-roof verandas that extend the house into the garden, usable in any weather.
In short
What does Gardenscape mean by verandas?
Verandas and glass-roof verandas that extend the house into the garden, usable in any weather.
A veranda, the house extended into the garden
A veranda is a covered space against the house that lets you sit out in any weather, the bridge between indoors and the garden. Unlike a freestanding structure, it works with the house, sheltered and close to the door, so it gets used far more of the year. We design and build verandas, including glass-roof verandas, to suit the property.
Genuine all-weather shelter
The point of a veranda is shelter you actually use. A glazed roof keeps the rain off while letting the light through, so the space stays bright and usable through spring and autumn, not just high summer. It turns the edge of the house into an outdoor room you reach for whatever the weather is doing.
Built to work with the house
Because a veranda attaches to the house, the detailing matters: the roof and its glazing, the span and posts, how it ties into the building, and the drainage that carries water away cleanly. We design it to sit with the architecture and build it to handle the weather. A structure fixed to the house can count as an extension for planning, which we check and design around.
Designed into the garden
A veranda works best designed with the terrace, the planting and the way you move out from the house. Arrange a consultation and we will design one to suit your home.
Cost context
Indicative ranges
Figures are relative, not quotations. Each scheme is priced after a survey of access, levels, drainage and finish standard.
| What changes the cost |
|---|
| roof glazing |
| span and posts |
| integration with the house |
| drainage |
Source: Gardenscape. Figures as of 2026-06-03.
Common questions
Common questions
A veranda is a covered space attached to the house, giving sheltered all-weather use close to the door; a pergola is usually freestanding and more open. A veranda tends to get used more of the year because it works with the house.
Yes. A glazed roof keeps the rain off while letting the light through, so the space stays bright and usable through spring and autumn, not just in summer.
A structure fixed to the house can count as an extension for planning purposes, which changes the rules, and designated land tightens them further. We check the position and design around it.
Yes, with the detailing and materials designed to suit the building and any conservation setting. We design it to sit with the architecture rather than imposed on it.
Arrange a consultation
Send a few photographs and a sentence about the site. We will reply personally.

