Edwardian Bay Windows: Secondary Glazing That Actually Fits the Curve

    Specialist guidance for London & Home Counties heritage properties — published 12 April 2026.

    Edwardian bay windows (1901-1910) are larger, more elaborate and more curved than their Victorian predecessors. Five-light bays, square bays, splayed bays, occasionally fully arched bays — they're the showpieces of suburban Edwardian streets in Muswell Hill, Ealing, Wimbledon and Streatham. They're also the windows most likely to be cited in property listings as 'original features' — which means whatever you do to them must be reversible and visually quiet.

    Why Most Bay Window Glazing Goes Wrong

    The most common mistake is treating an Edwardian bay as one window. It isn't — it's three to five separate panels meeting at angles, each sitting in a slightly different plane. Off-the-shelf rectangular secondary units forced into a bay leave triangular gaps at the corners that destroy the acoustic seal. The result is a system that looks cheap and performs at maybe 60% of its rated dB reduction.

    How Specialist Installers Tackle the Bay

    A proper Edwardian bay installation starts with a templating visit — laser measurement of every reveal, every angle, every corner imperfection accumulated over 120 years. Each facet is fabricated as an individual unit with mitred frame corners, then assembled on site with continuous compression seals at every junction. The frames are powder-coated to match the existing internal paintwork, usually a cream or off-white. Done well, the bay still looks Edwardian; done badly, it looks like a 1980s conservatory.

    Frame Profile and Mechanism Choice

    For period properties, the choice between vertical sliding, horizontal sliding, hinged and lift-out secondary units is dictated as much by aesthetics as by function. Vertical sliders mirror the operation of an original sash window and are the default for any sash-windowed property. Hinged units suit casement windows and arched heads. Lift-out panels are the most discreet and the cheapest, but they sacrifice operability — appropriate for windows you rarely open.

    Compare all mechanism types side by side on the glazing types overview, or review the specific sash window secondary glazing options for traditional sashes.

    What Real Installations Actually Deliver

    Marketing claims for acoustic glazing range from honest to wildly optimistic. The realistic benchmarks from our portfolio: a 10.8mm acoustic laminate system with a 150mm cavity achieves 42-46 dB total reduction (versus 22-26 dB for original single glazing), eliminates condensation on the inner pane within one heating season, and reduces heat loss through the treated window by 60-65%.

    For thermal performance specifically, our thermal performance guide sets out the U-values; for acoustic numbers, the noise reduction guide shows real before-and-after measurements from London projects.

    Customers consistently describe the post-installation experience in two phrases: 'I didn't realise how loud it was before' and 'the bedroom finally feels separate from the street'. Both are honest reactions to a 20+ dB drop in ambient noise — perceived by the brain as a fourfold reduction in loudness.

    The Heritage and Planning Angle

    For listed and conservation-area properties — which describes the majority of pre-1939 housing in London and the Home Counties — secondary glazing is the only thermally and acoustically meaningful upgrade that's reliably approvable. Replacement double glazing is refused as a matter of routine for listed buildings; even slimline heritage-style units rarely clear conservation review.

    Our listed buildings guide sets out the reasoning conservation officers use, and our secondary glazing vs double glazing for listed buildings explainer breaks down the specific 'reversibility' test that decides which alterations get approved. The short answer: internal, removable, no damage to original fabric — and you're almost always fine.

    For projects in particularly sensitive locations — within sight of a Grade I building, in a designated cathedral conservation area, or within a national park — we'll always advise a courtesy notification to the conservation officer before installation, even where strict consent isn't required.

    Realistic Project Pricing for 2026

    Per-window pricing for a single specification-grade secondary glazing unit in 2026 typically ranges from £550 (small thermal-spec casement) to £1,750 (large bay sash with 10.8mm acoustic laminate), all installation included. Whole-house projects unlock 15-25% discounts versus single-unit pricing thanks to fixed-cost amortisation across multiple windows.

    For honest project budgeting, see our whole-house cost guide or run your own figures through the bespoke estimator — both tools include the per-window discount that whole-project quotes attract. Compare against the 2026 London price breakdown for benchmark per-window figures.

    All quotes from our network include detailed survey, bespoke manufacture, professional installation, perimeter sealing, manufacturer's glass guarantee, and a 10-year installation warranty. Hidden extras (decorating reinstatement, scaffolding, structural alterations) are rare with secondary glazing because the work is internal and non-structural.

    How to Take the Next Step

    The standard project timeline runs roughly four weeks from first enquiry to completed installation: 3-5 days to first survey, 5 working days to detailed quote, 2-3 weeks for bespoke manufacture, then 1-2 days on site for fitting. Survey visits are free and non-obligation; quotes are detailed and itemised window by window.

    Start with the online estimator for a tailored installed-price figure based on your specific window count and postcode, or browse our case studies to see comparable London and Home Counties projects with before-and-after photographs and measured acoustic data.

    For specific local context — including which London areas and Home Counties towns we cover most frequently and the typical project specs in each — see our location pages. Every project we take on includes a manual survey verification before the final quote, so the figure you sign off on is the figure you pay.

    Ready for a tailored quote?

    Every London and Home Counties property is different. Use our bespoke estimator for an installation-inclusive figure based on your exact window count, glass spec, and postcode.

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