Tiled Conservatory Roofs in Salford.
Supalite tiled roof replacement across the City of Salford — from our Worsley base out to Walkden, Swinton, Eccles, Pendlebury and Salford Quays. We’re local. Most surveys go in within the week.
This is our doorstep.
Our base at Wardley Industrial Estate sits inside the Salford boundary — so most of the borough is somewhere between five and twenty minutes from our yard. Salford ranges from the village conservation around Worsley Green and Boothstown out to the dense Victorian terraces of Pendlebury, Clifton and Lower Broughton, the mid-century semis of Swinton, Walkden and Eccles, and the modern apartment developments along Salford Quays.
For most Salford homes, a polycarbonate conservatory has been bolted to the back of the house since the late 1990s or early 2000s. The 1930s tiled semis of Walkden, Swinton and Eccles are particularly common candidates — moderately sized rear gardens, conservatory squeezed between the kitchen and the back wall, polycarb roof now well past its useful life. The same pattern repeats across Monton, Patricroft, Winton, Pendlebury and Higher Broughton.
Because we’re local, surveys go in quickly, materials run direct from the yard, and the install team isn’t losing half the day in traffic. Most Salford clients see a surveyor within a few days of their enquiry, and a written quote within the working week.
The same four problems, from Walkden to the Quays.
South-facing semis cooking
The 1930s semis of Walkden, Swinton and Eccles often sit with rear gardens facing south. The polycarbonate roof above turns the conservatory into a greenhouse from May to September.
Sag and discolour
20-year-old polycarb panels on Pendlebury and Lower Broughton terraces warp and yellow. Leaks at the wall flashing are common where the conservatory abuts the existing brick.
Cold north-facing rooms
Not every Salford garden faces south. North-facing rooms in Eccles, Patricroft and Monton end up running plug-in oil heaters that never quite warm the room.
Big detached, big swings
Larger detached homes around Boothstown, Roe Green and the older parts of Worsley have bigger rear conservatories with proportionally wider temperature swings — and bigger heating bills to chase.
Tile choices for Salford’s mix.
Salford gives you plenty of variety. For the dense red-brick streets of Pendlebury, Lower Broughton and parts of Eccles, Tapco Brick Red and the warmer Tapco shades like Chestnut Brown sit naturally alongside the existing Victorian and Edwardian brick. For the 1930s tiled semis of Walkden, Swinton and Worsley, Extralight Charcoal or Tapco Stone Black picks up on the existing concrete tile roof, so the new conservatory roof reads as a deliberate continuation rather than an addition.
For the bigger detached homes of Boothstown, Roe Green and the conservation parts of Worsley, Extralight Walnut or Tapco Pewter Grey is the most considered pick — clean, contemporary, quietly in keeping with the surrounding architecture. The surveyor brings real samples of both Extralight and Tapco to every visit, so you can hold them up against your own brick or roof tiles before deciding.
What to expect on a Salford install.
Worsley Green and the Old Hall area sit within Salford’s most prominent conservation area, but as elsewhere, conservation status governs front elevations and street-facing materials — not rear-garden conservatory roofs hidden from the public highway. Permitted development applies for replacement conservatory roofs in almost every case. Our surveyor confirms anything unusual at the visit.
Access is straightforward across most of Salford. The wider streets of Walkden, Swinton, Boothstown, Worsley and Eccles let us work directly off the driveway. Higher density terraced streets in Pendlebury, Clifton and Lower Broughton get the same advance parking dispensations we apply elsewhere — we coordinate with Salford City Council’s parking team where the kerbside is permit-only. From our base, most addresses are reachable in 5 to 20 minutes.
Where in Salford we cover.
We install Supalite tiled roofs across Salford, including Worsley, Boothstown, Roe Green, Walkden, Swinton, Pendlebury, Clifton, Eccles, Monton, Patricroft, Winton, Irlam, Cadishead, Higher Broughton, Lower Broughton, Kersal, Pendleton, Ordsall and the wider Salford Quays area. If your address is anywhere in the M5, M6, M7, M27, M28 or M30 postcodes, we cover you.
We also serve the neighbouring areas of Manchester, Trafford, Bolton and Bury.
Local questions we hear most often.
How quickly can you reach my Salford address?
Does the Worsley conservation area affect my conservatory roof?
Are there Salford streets that are difficult to access?
Can you handle larger detached conservatories around Boothstown?
Free home survey in Salford.
We’re local. Most surveys go in within the week. Fixed-price quote, no pressure either way.