Serving historic and landmark buildings in Kennett Square with preservation-compliant UV, safety, and energy window film.
Sun Control Specialists installs preservation-compliant window film throughout Kennett Square and Chester County. We work on historic homes, churches, courthouses, museums, and landmark commercial buildings, choosing low-reflectance film at a visible-light level that holds the original look of the glass while protecting interiors from UV and adding safety film to fragile original glazing. When a historic commission or landmark board is involved, we document the specification so it can be reviewed and approved.
Kennett Square pairs 55+ communities like Stonebridge with historic borough homes from a town that pre-dates the Civil War. The 55+ crowd wants UV protection for artwork and flooring more than heat rejection — most have lived in the home long enough to have watched fading happen and want it stopped. The borough crowd wants solar control without touching the historic glass appearance, which means clear ceramic film at high VLT. Different films, different conversations, both within a five-minute drive of each other. The Longwood Gardens corridor brings a steady stream of executive-relocation business; people who buy here usually research the install carefully and call us already knowing which film line they want.
Low-reflectance film at a visible-light level chosen to match the existing glass, so the building reads the same from the public way. We document the specification for review by your historic commission or landmark board.
Learn moreBlocks up to 99% of ultraviolet light, the single largest cause of fading in woodwork, plaster, oil paintings, textiles, archival paper, and period furnishings. Near-clear options keep interiors bright while protecting the collection.
Learn moreBonds aging single-pane and original mullioned glass so a cracked or broken pane holds in the frame instead of falling. A practical answer for churches, courthouses, and public buildings where replacing the glass is not an option.
Learn moreNon-reflective film at a matched visible-light level means the facade looks unchanged from the sidewalk. That is what most preservation guidelines actually require.
Interior-applied film is removable and adds no permanent alteration to historic glass, which lines up with the reversibility most landmark standards favor.
Up to 99% UV rejection shields original woodwork, murals, stained finishes, artifacts, and textiles from the fading that ordinary glass does nothing to stop.
Solar film cuts heat gain and cooling load on single-pane historic glazing, so you improve comfort and operating cost without ripping out the original windows.
Safety film keeps brittle old panes in the frame if they crack, reducing the hazard and the cost of an emergency reglaze on irreplaceable glass.
We provide product specifications, visible-light and reflectance data, and installation certificates formatted for preservation commissions, landmark boards, and grant files.
We walk the building, measure each elevation, look at the condition of the original glass, and review the preservation standards or commission requirements that apply before we recommend anything.
You receive a line-item proposal naming the exact film, its visible-light and reflectance values, and the reasoning, written so it can go straight to a historic commission or landmark board for approval.
Our crew works gently around old putty, wavy glass, and delicate sashes. Interiors, furnishings, and collections are protected throughout, and the work is reversible.
You receive the installation certificate, manufacturer warranty registered in the building owner name, and a spec packet for your preservation file and insurance records.
SolarGard Panorama Elite installer. Preservation-appropriate UV, solar, and safety film for historic glazing.
Not sure which fits? Start at our window film installation hub for an overview of every option.
Free, itemized written estimate. No pressure. Most historic & landmark properties in Kennett Square install in a single day.