Service area

Tiled Conservatory Roofs in Stockport.

Supalite tiled roof replacement across Stockport — Bramhall, Cheadle, the four Heatons, Hazel Grove, Marple, Romiley and beyond. Building Regulations compliant, 10-year insurance-backed guarantee.

Local context

Stockport is conservatory country.

Stockport’s housing stock is some of the most conservatory-friendly in Greater Manchester. The four Heatons — Mersey, Norris, Chapel and Moor — are dominated by 1920s and 1930s semis with generous rear gardens. Bramhall, Cheadle Hulme, Hazel Grove and Marple bring more modern detached and semi-detached homes, many of them already conservatory-equipped. Central Stockport, Edgeley and Reddish are red-brick Victorian and Edwardian terraces.

Stockport’s affluent suburbs were prime conservatory territory through the 1990s and 2000s. Two decades of polycarbonate roofs across Bramhall, Cheadle, the Heatons and Hazel Grove are now showing their age — and the south or south-west facing back gardens common in this part of the city give particularly extreme temperature swings. We see more conservatories per square mile across Stockport than almost anywhere else in our service area.

From Worsley, Stockport is 25 to 35 minutes via the M60. Reddish and Heaton Mersey at the northern end of the borough are quicker; Marple and Romiley out east take a few minutes longer.

What we see across Stockport

Four problems we keep meeting on Stockport surveys.

The Heatons sun-traps

Heaton Mersey, Norris, Chapel and Moor 1930s semis with south-facing rear gardens are the classic Stockport conservatory candidate — intense summer overheating, cold winter rooms, dated polycarb above.

Bramhall/Cheadle big swings

The bigger detached homes of Bramhall and Cheadle Hulme have larger rear conservatories — and proportionally bigger temperature swings, plus higher heating bills to chase.

Hazel Grove/Marple terraces

Older south-facing terraces and semis across Hazel Grove and Marple share the Heatons’ sun-trap problem on a slightly different scale — and often with even older polycarb roofs.

Edgeley/Reddish polycarb sag

Older Victorian terraces in Edgeley and Reddish often have shorter rear extensions with conservatories squeezed in — 20-year polycarb sag, leaks at the wall flashing, the lot.

Local character

Tile choices for Stockport’s suburbs.

The four Heatons, Bramhall and Cheadle take the full Supalite palette comfortably. A lot of the existing house roofs in this part of the borough are concrete tile in tonal greys, so Extralight Charcoal or Tapco Stone Black read as the most considered fits — the new conservatory roof picks up on the existing roofline rather than fighting it.

For the red-brick Victorian streets of Edgeley, Reddish and central Stockport, Tapco Brick Red or warmer Tapco shades like Chestnut Brown tie naturally into the existing brick. Marple and the more rural parts of the eastern borough take Tapco Pewter Grey particularly well, picking up on the area’s greener, more traditional character. We bring real samples of both Extralight and Tapco to every survey.

Local knowledge

What to expect on a Stockport install.

Stockport’s conservation areas include parts of Marple, Bramhall and the Heatons. As elsewhere, conservation status mainly governs front elevations and street-facing materials. Permitted development applies for replacement conservatory roofs in almost every case. Our surveyor confirms anything unusual at the visit.

Access is generally good across Stockport’s wider suburban streets — Bramhall, the Heatons, Cheadle Hulme and Hazel Grove typically work directly off the driveway. Older terraced streets in Edgeley, Reddish and central Stockport occasionally need a little parking planning, which we coordinate with Stockport Council ahead of install day. The drive from Worsley via the M60 is straightforward.

Coverage

Where in Stockport we cover.

We install Supalite tiled roofs across Stockport, including Bramhall, Cheadle, Cheadle Hulme, Heaton Mersey, Heaton Norris, Heaton Chapel, Heaton Moor, Hazel Grove, Marple, Romiley, Reddish, Edgeley, Davenport, Woodsmoor, Adswood, Gatley and Offerton. If your address is in the SK1 to SK8 postcodes, we cover you.

We also serve the neighbouring areas of Manchester, Trafford and Tameside.

Stockport FAQs

Local questions we hear most often.

How long does it take to reach Stockport from Worsley?
Most Stockport addresses are 25–35 minutes by van from our Worsley base via the M60. Reddish and Heaton Mersey at the closer end are quicker; Marple and Romiley out east are at the longer end. Most surveys are arranged within a few days of your enquiry.
What’s the issue with conservatories in the Heatons?
The Heatons — Mersey, Norris, Chapel and Moor — are dominated by 1920s and 1930s semis with generous south or south-west facing rear gardens. The polycarbonate conservatories added across the area in the 1990s and 2000s sit directly in the sun-trap, and temperatures get into the high 30s in summer. A Supalite roof at U-value 0.15 W/m²K eliminates most of that solar gain.
Can the system handle larger detached conservatories in Bramhall and Cheadle Hulme?
Yes — the Supalite system scales up well. Bramhall, Cheadle Hulme, Hale Barns and the leafier parts of Marple often have rear conservatories running 20+ square metres. The structure is engineered to handle larger spans, and the install team is set up to deliver the bigger jobs within our typical 5–10 day window. Larger jobs sit at the longer end of that range.
Will an older Edgeley or Reddish base support a tiled roof?
In most cases, yes. The Supalite system is engineered to be lightweight (around 40 kg/m²) so it can drop onto existing conservatory bases and frames without rebuild. Older Victorian and Edwardian terrace conservatories around Edgeley, Reddish and central Stockport are well within typical scope. The surveyor checks the structural condition on site.
Free, no-obligation

Free home survey in Stockport.

We’ll measure up, talk through tile and ceiling options, and give you a fixed-price quote. No pressure either way.

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