Skip to main content
Secondary glazing installed on Victorian sash window in London period home
Authored by the Secondary Glazing Specialist Technical Team | Updated February 2026
February 2026 15 min read Technical Team

Noise Reduction Windows London: The Complete Technical Analysis

An Expert Technical Analysis for London's Heritage Property Owners.

80%

Noise Reduction

Up to 50 dB with 10.8mm acoustic laminate and 100mm air gap

100mm

Critical Air Gap

5-8x wider than double glazing for acoustic decoupling

10.8mm

Stadip Silence Glass

Gold-standard acoustic laminate with specialist PVB interlayer

Living in a beautiful Georgian townhouse in Chelsea or a Victorian terrace in Kensington comes with undeniable charm. But let's be honest, those stunning original sash windows weren't designed to handle the relentless noise of 21st-century London. Between the early morning traffic on the King's Road, the Heathrow flight path, and the constant hum of city life, even the most elegant period home can feel like it's under sonic siege.

The problem is that your typical soundproofing solutions, modern double glazing or complete window replacement, are often off the table. Whether you're in a conservation area or simply want to preserve the architectural integrity of your property, you need a solution that delivers serious noise reduction without compromising your home's heritage character.

That's where acoustic secondary glazing comes in. And not just any secondary glazing, we're talking about the high-performance stuff that actually works.

Why Standard Solutions Fall Short for Period Properties

If you've done any research into soundproof secondary glazing, you've probably come across DIY kits promising easy installation and decent results. Here's the reality: those kits are designed for garden offices and spare bedrooms, not for high-value properties in Westminster.

The issue isn't just about aesthetics (though those plastic frames certainly don't belong near your original timber sashes). It's about performance. Most DIY secondary glazing uses thin glass, typically 4mm, and minimal air gaps. That might knock off a few decibels, but it won't give you the peaceful sanctuary you're paying for in one of London's prime postcodes.

Professional-grade acoustic secondary glazing is a different beast entirely. It's engineered specifically to combat the low-frequency rumble of buses on Sloane Street and the high-pitched whine of aircraft over Richmond Park. And it does this while remaining completely invisible from the street.

Secondary glazing installed on Victorian sash window in London period home interior

Professional acoustic secondary glazing on Victorian sash windows -- invisible from the street, transformative from inside.

The Science of Silence: How 100mm Air Gaps Change Everything

The secret to effective noise reduction windows London residents actually notice comes down to two critical factors: the air gap and the glass specification.

Standard double glazing, the kind you'd find in a new-build flat, typically has a 12-20mm gap between panes. Secondary glazing, when done properly, creates a 100mm cavity between your existing window and the new internal pane. This isn't just "more space." It's a fundamental shift in how sound waves behave.

Sound travels through vibration. When noise hits your original window, the glass vibrates and transmits that energy through to your room. With secondary glazing, those vibrations hit the first pane, then have to travel across 100mm of dead air space before reaching the second pane. During that journey, the sound waves lose energy, lots of it.

Key Principle: Acoustic Decoupling

This is called acoustic decoupling, and it's why properly installed secondary glazing can achieve 70-80% noise reduction. The roar of traffic on Cromwell Road becomes a distant murmur. The 6am refuse collection becomes a minor background presence you barely register.

But here's where it gets interesting: the air gap alone isn't enough. You need the right glass specification to complete the equation.

The 10.8mm Acoustic Laminate Advantage

Walk into any secondary glazing showroom and you'll see plenty of options. Most will offer 6.4mm laminated glass as their "acoustic upgrade." It's better than standard glass, sure. But if you're serious about soundproofing a period home in central London, you need 10.8mm acoustic laminate glass.

Specifically, we're talking about Stadip Silence, a specialized acoustic laminate that's become the gold standard for noise reduction in high-end residential properties. Unlike standard laminated glass, Stadip Silence uses a specially formulated PVB (polyvinyl butyral) interlayer that's specifically designed to absorb sound energy.

Think of it like this: regular laminated glass is designed primarily for safety, keeping the glass together if it breaks. Acoustic laminate is designed to dampen. The thicker interlayer acts like a shock absorber for sound waves, converting acoustic energy into a tiny amount of heat instead of letting it pass through.

6.4mm Standard Laminate

35-40 dB

Adequate for moderate urban environments

10.8mm Stadip Silence

45-50 dB

Traffic noise louder than conversation becomes quieter than a whisper

Cross-section diagram showing 100mm air gap blocking sound waves in secondary glazing

The 100mm air cavity acts as an acoustic buffer, decoupling sound vibrations between panes.

Why This Matters for Sash Windows

If you own a period property in London, there's a good chance you have original timber sash windows. These are beautiful, irreplaceable features, but they're also single-glazed, draughty, and acoustically about as effective as leaving your window open.

The question of secondary glazing sash windows cost comes up constantly, usually followed by "and is it even worth it?" Let's address both.

Cost Comparison: Sash Windows

Acoustic Secondary Glazing

Typical Kensington sash: £800-£1,200 per window. Fully reversible, no planning permission needed.

Full Sash Replacement with Double Glazing

£2,500+ per window. Requires planning permission in conservation areas. Destroys original character. Irreversible.

More importantly, secondary glazing is reversible. If you ever sell your property, the new owner can remove it without affecting the original windows. Try doing that with replacement double glazing.

As for whether it's worth it: if you're currently being woken up by traffic noise, if you can't open your windows in summer because of the din from the street, or if you're struggling to concentrate in your home office because of aircraft noise, then yes: it's absolutely worth it.

Beyond Soundproofing: The Hidden Benefits

Here's something most people don't realize until after installation: acoustic secondary glazing doesn't just reduce noise. The same 100mm air gap that blocks sound also creates exceptional thermal insulation.

60%

Heat Loss Reduction

Lower energy bills, improved EPC ratings

Zero

Condensation

No more streaming windows or black mould

2x

Security Layers

Two layers of laminated glass for break-in resistance

Period homes in London are notoriously expensive to heat. Those beautiful single-glazed sash windows are essentially thermal holes in your walls. Adding secondary glazing can reduce heat loss through windows by up to 60%, which translates directly to lower energy bills and improved EPC ratings: increasingly important for high-end properties.

There's also the condensation issue. If you've ever woken up to streaming windows and worried about black mould on your window frames, secondary glazing addresses this by raising the internal pane temperature and preventing moisture from condensing.

And then there's security. While it's not marketed primarily as a security solution, having two layers of laminated glass makes your windows significantly more resistant to break-ins. For ground-floor properties in areas like Notting Hill or Maida Vale, this is a legitimate consideration.

10.8mm acoustic laminate glass with Stadip Silence layers for soundproofing

10.8mm Stadip Silence acoustic laminate: specialist PVB interlayer converts sound energy into heat.

Real-World Applications Across London

The effectiveness of soundproof secondary glazing varies depending on your specific noise challenges. A Grade II listed Georgian house backing onto Kensington High Street faces different acoustic issues than a Victorian villa under the Richmond flight path.

Traffic Noise

The constant low-frequency rumble of buses, lorries, and black cabs. The 100mm air gap combined with 10.8mm acoustic laminate is essential. Anything less simply won't shift the bass frequencies enough to make a meaningful difference.

Common areas: Cromwell Road, Kensington High Street, Sloane Street

Aircraft Noise

Higher frequency sound where the acoustic laminate becomes even more critical. The PVB interlayer in Stadip Silence is specifically tuned to absorb frequencies produced by jet engines.

Common areas: Richmond, Kew, Chiswick, Hammersmith

Mixed Urban Noise

A combination of traffic, construction, and general urban noise where the comprehensive approach of professional secondary glazing pays dividends. Clients report 'rediscovering' their homes.

Common areas: Westminster, City of London, Marylebone, Fitzrovia

Making the Investment Decision

The secondary glazing sash windows cost conversation usually comes down to priorities. If you're planning to stay in your period property long-term, and if noise is genuinely affecting your quality of life, then professional acoustic secondary glazing should be viewed as an essential upgrade rather than a luxury.

Consider what you're protecting: your sleep, your ability to work from home effectively, your children's ability to concentrate on homework, your overall stress levels. The World Health Organization classifies environmental noise as a serious health hazard, linked to cardiovascular disease, sleep disturbance, and cognitive impairment in children.

WHO Health Warning

The World Health Organization classifies environmental noise as a serious health hazard, linked to cardiovascular disease, sleep disturbance, and cognitive impairment in children. Spending £800-£1,200 per window to reclaim peace in your own home is an investment in your wellbeing.

Peaceful Georgian bedroom in Kensington with acoustic secondary glazing on sash windows

A peaceful Kensington bedroom with acoustic secondary glazing: silence, warmth, and heritage preservation.

The Installation Reality

One advantage of secondary glazing over replacement windows is the installation process. There's no structural work required, no planning permission needed (in most cases), and installation typically takes just 2-3 hours per window.

The secondary pane is fitted to the internal reveal of your existing window using slim aluminium frames that can be colour-matched to your decor. From inside the room, you notice the immediate benefits: silence, warmth, and comfort. From the street, your period property looks exactly as it should.

Final Thoughts

If you're living in a London period home and struggling with noise, you essentially have two options: accept it as the price of city living, or do something properly effective about it.

DIY kits won't cut it for serious urban noise in high-value properties. Replacement double glazing destroys the very character that makes your property valuable. But professional acoustic secondary glazing: with proper air gaps and proper glass specifications: gives you the best of both worlds: heritage preservation and genuine acoustic comfort.

The formula for silence in the city: 100mm air gaps. 10.8mm acoustic laminate. Professional installation.

Is your home suffering from London's noise pollution?

Our acoustic specialists will measure your noise levels, assess your windows, and recommend the exact glass specification for your property. Completely free, no obligation.

Get an Acoustic Assessment Today

Frequently Asked Questions

Why a Free Acoustic Survey Is Essential

Every property is different. The noise sources, window sizes, building construction, and even room layout all affect which acoustic solution will work best. A site survey lets us:

Measure actual noise levels

We take dB readings at your windows to understand exactly what you're dealing with — not just guess from the road type.

Assess your existing windows

The condition, type, and age of your sash or casement windows determines the optimal secondary glazing system.

Specify the right glass

Based on your noise profile, we recommend the optimal glass — from 6.4mm laminated to 10.8mm acoustic laminate for the most demanding environments.

Check cavity depth

We measure the available reveal depth to ensure we achieve the maximum possible air gap for acoustic performance.

Heritage compliance

For listed buildings and conservation areas, we advise on the method that satisfies conservation officers while maximising soundproofing.