LESSONS IN RENOVATION

As the UK feels the repercussions of the change in Government since the election earlier in the year, one spending cut stands out for the education sector. The ...

IT’S ACTUALLY QUITE EASY BEING GREEN

Whether it’s to help save the planet or simply ease the strain on your wallet, reducing energy consumption is something every homeowner needs to be thinking abo...

It’s all about renovating sash windows the green way!

When renovating casement or sash windows, our aim is to minimise Ventrolla’s impact on the environment and develop busi...

No more noisy windows

Ventrolla London Commercial, the sash window renovation specialist, has successfully completed an £80,000 project on 44 residential flats in Greenwich. The comp...

RIBA approved CPD worth double points

RIBA CPD Network Replacing windows can result in unnecessary complications, higher costs to the client, loss of the building’s character and a negative impact o...

Case studies fianlly done……….!!!

Finally completed all the case studies…… in need a very strong cup of coffee right now. For those of you wanting to know a little more about our wor...

It’s oh so quiet……..

Sliding sash windows normally require at least 3mm of perimeter gap to slide properly. In an average sized window of 1.2m x 1.8m, the aggregate gap area would b...

GANTS HILL LIBRARY GETS THE VENTROLLA TOUCH!

Ventrolla have just completed repairs on 12 period timber windows at Gants Hill Library in Ilford.  It took three months to complete and involved extensive repa...

Enjoy reduced VAT rate on energy saving materials

While the government has confirmed a rise in the standard rate of VAT to 20%, a number of energy saving materials still quali...

A useful article about period sash windows from Winchester council

The article focuses on tradition sash windows from the 18th and 19th century, as well as;  The Historic Development of the Sa...

Read our blog
Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter
Timber sash and casement window renovation.
Call us free on 0800 0277 454 (UK) or 1-800-948-359 (Ireland)

History of the Sash Window

Sash Windows in Listed Building

•    The sliding sash window existed in Europe as early as the thirteenth century. During this period windows were no more than vertical sliding timber shutters

•    By the end of the sixteenth century sash windows had become glazed, horizontally sliding sash windows, and by the mid seventeenth century were superseded with vertical sliding sash windows, introduced mainly in France. This type of window was used in passageways and staircases, as casement windows (which opened inwards) could be an obstruction to the occupants

•    It was during the post restoration period, with the nobility returning from France, that much of the sophisticated architecture of the vertical sliding sash window crossed the Channel to England. It is believed that one of the first fully glazed vertical sliding windows was installed for Henrietta Maria, the Queen Mother, who, returning from France with her entourage, which included French joiners, influenced the refurbishment of Somerset House in London, which years later Ventrolla would renovate

•    The exact timing of the development of the vertical sliding sash window (with a counter balance) is not precise, and numerous theories are proffered. It is widely believed that it was actually invented in England. A progression from the original vertical sliding sash window, it was glazed with small squares of glass approximately 250mm x 250mm, and thick glazing bars in excess of 40mm made it an extremely heavy window to open

•    The art of counter balancing was first used in doors. There is documented evidence in the “Office of Works Account 1663” of weights and lines being fitted to doors in various buildings at Whitehall. It was then only a matter of time before this development was used in sash windows. The Office of Works has further accounts which state that the Master Joiner, Thomas Kinward, installed lines and pulleys into the sash windows at the Queen’s private apartment in Whitehall at the end of 1669, though there is no mention of the counter weights

•    In 1672 Ham House, the London property of the Duke and Duchess of Lauderdale, underwent alterations. There is clear evidence that the sash windows installed were counter balanced, again by Thomas Kinward, who, together with Christopher Wren, signed the accounts

•    The sash window counter balance system was never patented, nor did anyone claim to be its inventor

•    The earliest sash windows had solid oak frames, with a groove cut out for the weights. Only the bottom sash opened, the top sash being fixed in position. Little time passed before the development of the boxed frame, which was made in sections to allow the now hidden weights to pass each other

•    The number of panes slowly reduced, as did the thickness of the glazing bars, but it was not until the removal of the duty on glass in 1845, when the price of the plate glass fell by three quarters, that the individual panes became larger, with only two panes per sash. Indeed, a sign of wealth was to have one pane per sash! It was in the mid nineteenth century that horns on the top of the bottom sash and the bottom of the top sash first appeared, to give extra support to the glass

•    Ventrolla have been renovating and performance-upgrading sliding sash windows since 1984, and reserve their place in modern history as the market leader and leading authority in original sash window renovation

Click here to send us your enquiry

Read more about the Ventrolla Sash Window Renovation service.