Cladding recommendations?
Author
Discussion

gareth h

Original Poster:

4,167 posts

252 months

Tuesday 27th January
quotequote all
I’ve got a small section of cladding on an extension which is being built, the builders have given me a sample of a composite product, which I’m not too keen on, am considering charred timber, but the house is pretty exposed to the elements, any recommendations?

What I’ve been offered



This is the clad section, the rear of the house is / will be rendered and painted white.


thebraketester

15,420 posts

160 months

Tuesday 27th January
quotequote all
Cedar seems to be the trend over the last few years. Or hardiboard

dhdev

99 posts

242 months

Tuesday 27th January
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Millboard is very realistic, we used it on our renovation and I’ve lost count of the number of people who thought it was real wood.

barryrs

4,941 posts

245 months

Tuesday 27th January
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Thermowood.

Mine has been up for 7 years, has never been treated with any products, and hasn’t moved even 1mm.

mcelliott

10,005 posts

203 months

Wednesday 28th January
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We are going to for Accoya on our house build.

LooneyTunes

8,855 posts

180 months

Wednesday 28th January
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The main thing to decide is how you want it to age: the likes of oak and cedar will silver if left natural and untreated. UV treating them isn’t difficult but if you don’t stay on top of it you won’t get back to the original colour. I suspect that part of the reason for proposing a composite is that the colour is then locked in (as it is on the render).

One advantage you have with where the cladding is being placed is that it’s not going to be viewed close up. It’d be worth seeing if there is another build you can go and see, with a larger expanse of the composite, before dismissing it completely. Might well look much better than a small sample close up.

gangzoom

8,013 posts

237 months

Wednesday 28th January
quotequote all
We got a composite cladding on the house, we considered wood but the composite stuff these days are really good. It's got a nice texture, and requires zero maintenance, 18 months on and still looks 'as new'. For us the contrast against white render also works really well.




gareth h

Original Poster:

4,167 posts

252 months

Friday 6th February
quotequote all
dhdev said:
Millboard is very realistic, we used it on our renovation and I ve lost count of the number of people who thought it was real wood.
Thanks, I got a sample of their burnt cedar and it looks perfect

Lotobear

8,605 posts

150 months

Friday 6th February
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Standing seam zinc would look good in that area OP

gareth h

Original Poster:

4,167 posts

252 months

Friday 6th February
quotequote all
Lotobear said:
Standing seam zinc would look good in that area OP
I wanted that for the roof but the teenager from planning said it wouldn’t look like the rest of the house, which obviously was the point!

Ranger 6

7,539 posts

271 months

Friday 6th February
quotequote all
How much of the rest of the house is clad?

If it's just that, won't it look like a bit of a 'patch' after thought, rather than a feature?

gareth h

Original Poster:

4,167 posts

252 months

Friday 6th February
quotequote all
Ranger 6 said:
How much of the rest of the house is clad?

If it's just that, won't it look like a bit of a 'patch' after thought, rather than a feature?
Hopefully not, I paid the architect a hefty sum!