Orangery vs Conservatory: Complete Guide in Ferndown

An orangery sits between a conservatory and a full extension. It has solid walls with large windows and a flat roof with a central lantern — giving it more presence and year-round usability than a conservatory, at a lower cost than a brick-built extension. Here is what Ferndown homeowners — covered by Dorset Council — need to know about costs, planning, and timelines.

Local cost range — Ferndown

£1,700–£2,400/m²

Ferndown's generous plot sizes and good access make it one of the most straightforward (and cost-effective) areas to extend in Dorset. Bungalow conversions are particularly popular here.

Orangery vs Conservatory: Complete Guide rules in Ferndown

Ferndown falls under Dorset Council (Dorset Council). Dorset Council covers a large rural area with many villages in conservation areas and AONBs (Dorset AONB, Cranborne Chase AONB). Permitted Development rights may be restricted in these areas — always check before assuming PD applies.

Planning applications (annual)

~6,000

Average decision time

8–10 weeks

Approval rate

~87%

AONB coverage

Extensive

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What you need to know

Orangery vs conservatory vs extension

A conservatory is mostly glass (75%+ glazed roof and walls). An orangery has solid brick or rendered walls with large windows and a flat roof with a glazed lantern. A full extension is entirely solid construction. Orangeries look more substantial than conservatories and are warmer in winter and cooler in summer.

Design and materials

Modern orangeries typically use brick or rendered columns with aluminium bi-fold doors and a flat roof with a central roof lantern. The solid perimeter walls allow for better insulation than a conservatory, making the space comfortable year-round without excessive heating costs.

How much does it cost in Ferndown?

Local Ferndown rates: £1,700–£2,400/m². The table below shows national Dorset figures for reference.

ItemTypical Cost Range
Small orangery (12–16m²)£30,000–£50,000
Medium orangery (16–25m²)£45,000–£70,000
Large orangery (25–35m²)£65,000–£100,000
Roof lantern£3,000–£8,000
Professional fees£2,000–£4,000

Prices based on Dorset rates, 2026. Local Ferndown range: £1,700–£2,400/m².

Planning permission in Ferndown

Orangeries usually fall under Permitted Development as they are structurally similar to a single-storey extension. Standard PD rules apply — 4m/8m depth limits, height restrictions, and boundary conditions. In conservation areas, the solid walls and flat roof are often more acceptable than a glazed conservatory.

Standard single-storey extension PD rules apply. The 75% glazed roof rule that distinguishes conservatories from extensions under Building Regulations does not affect PD — it affects whether Building Regulations apply.

Dorset Council — local planning context

Dorset Council covers a large rural area with many villages in conservation areas and AONBs (Dorset AONB, Cranborne Chase AONB). Permitted Development rights may be restricted in these areas — always check before assuming PD applies.

Dorset Council processes approximately ~6,000 planning applications per year, with an approval rate of ~87%. Average decision time is 8–10 weeks.

Building regulations

If less than 75% of the roof and 50% of the walls are glazed, Building Regulations apply in full (same as a standard extension). Most orangeries fall into this category. If the glazing thresholds are exceeded, a thermal separation (door between house and orangery) may be required.

Typical timeline

PhaseDuration
Design2–3 weeks
Build8–14 weeks

Frequently asked questions

Orangery vs Conservatory: Complete Guide in other areas

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