Pitched roofs have a more traditional appearance while a flat roof can appear sleeker.
Pitched roof side garage extension.
Finally a pitched roof extension enables you to add more insulation which can help keep your energy bills lower and your house warmer.
The professionals at mustard architects designed the extension to blend in with the brickwork of the original building and the pitched roof gave them extra height without the addition looking boxy and imposing.
The upper portion of the roof is heavily pitched and the lower slope is gently pitched.
This allows you to put up higher ceilings or utilise the space below the roof in the form of a loft.
As pictured above it is likely to extend much further than a mansard besides having the lower pitched slope on the bottom.
The gable wall to your home is an external wall once it projects through the new pitched roof over the garage.
However this wall also forms and internal wall within the accommodation below.
With a pitched roof extension you inevitably benefit from more space beneath.
But flat glazed roofs or one with a series of rooflights can be equally as effective.
This might be enough to extend by around 4m right across the back of a typical semi or detached house with either a flat or low pitched sloping roof as a single storey or side return extension both ideal for creating a large open plan kitchen diner.
A single pitch roof can make a side return feel loftier inside and look attractive viewed from the garden.
The pitched roof extension at the side of this victorian property helped the owners achieve the new york loft style warehouse space they were after.