Upscale Botanical and Palm Houses
Enjoy in outdoors with a Conservatory
As the weather gets nice, outdoor activity picks up. It would be nice to have a room in your backyard to enjoy the outdoors all year round. The latest in outdoor rooms are Upscale Botanical and Palm Houses. These can be used for reading a book, horticulture, game recreation or entertaining your friends or maybe so of all of it.
Smaller garden conservatories have popular in this second half of the twentieth century, as conservatories have become part-greenhouses for conserving plants and part-recreational as a solarium or sunroom. They are often used as an extra room rather than for horticulture. These are nice to have very energy efficient.
The folks of Tanglewood Conservatories is making available Upscale line of period Botanical and Palm Houses. These are a beautiful addition to any home. These are some of the best examples of conservatories you have ever seen.
Get one and enjoy the outdoors
Denton, Md. —Tanglewood Conservatories Inc., already well known for its tantalizingly rich creations of nineteenth-century glass architecture, announces the introduction of its new line of upscale botanical and palm houses. Alan Stein, president and co-founder of Tanglewood remarks that “These structures are clearly intended to be a direct throwback to the exotic steel and glass botanical buildings that became so popular during the late nineteenth-century”.
Targeted at the top end of the market, these custom-designed wood, glass and steel structures can serve as fully functional greenhouses, botanical display houses or exotic sunroom additions for Tanglewood’s discerning clientele.
“I don’t know that these sort of structures have been built anywhere in the world for over a hundred years”, Stein remarked. Originally made possible by technological advances in steel and glass production that came out of the Industrial Revolution, conservatories began to fall out of favor in the twentieth-century due in large part to the tremendous expense of maintaining them.
In recent years however, conservatories, sunrooms and greenhouses have enjoyed a resurgence in popularity, particularly as upscale home additions, since such materials as insulated glass have made them much more practical.
However, a typical modern conservatory is mainly a stylized architectural “interpretation” of its antecedents, the degree of direct relation depending upon the skill of the designer and the level of commitment to its authenticity by the manufacturer. In contrast, the new series of Tanglewood’s creations are far closer to the originals than has been possible to find until now.
“We have literally revived building techniques that haven’t been used since the original great glass conservatories were constructed”, says Stein. “For example, a recent project was designed using hundreds of small panes of overlapping glass on its roof to form the curvature of a large dome.” “The shingle-like pieces of glass were each hand cut to fit the intricate framework”.
Other features that are often incorporated into these conservatories include exposed cast iron, decorative steel structural frames and intricately patterned stained glass.
The cost of this innovation is not insignificant. With a typical palm house conservatory ranging from several hundred thousand dollars to well over several million, these monumental glass artifacts are clearly not for everyone.




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