Restaurant uPVC work has unique requirements — kitchens generating constant steam and smell, dining rooms wanting open feel without losing AC efficiency, outdoor seating areas connected to indoor spaces, and the whole environment needing to handle aggressive daily cleaning. uPVC suits this context better than most materials, but the spec choices are specific.
Restaurant uPVC projects break into three zones with different requirements. The kitchen (heavy ventilation, easy-clean frames, oil-resistant finishes) usually has 2-4 high-set ventilators and one main window. The dining area (wider glazed sections, customer-facing aesthetics, sound management) often has 4-8 windows or a glazed front. The outdoor seating connection (sliding or bifold doors opening to a covered terrace) is the high-value upgrade for restaurants with patio dining. Total project for a typical 2,000-3,500 sqft restaurant: 15-25 openings.
" Restaurant windows do three different jobs in three different zones. Don't spec them as one project — spec the zones separately.
A home kitchen window plus a small ventilator handles family cooking. A restaurant kitchen produces multiples of that steam, oil aerosol, and heat. We typically spec restaurant kitchens with multiple louvre ventilators (handle-operated angled blades) plus a primary kitchen window that opens, plus integration with the exhaust hood system. uPVC handles the chemistry well — steam, oil, and cleaning chemicals don't damage the frame. The capacity comes from quantity and louvre design, not from a single bigger window.
Customers want restaurants to feel light and open — strong daylight, view of the street or garden, sense of connection to outside. AC running costs say the opposite — keep glazing tight, minimise heat gain, reduce solar load. The balance for Coimbatore restaurants usually involves wider glazing than home equivalents (for the open feel) but with performance specs (low-E coating on west-facing walls, double-glazing for noise, tinted treatments for direct sun). The customer experience and the running cost both matter.
A restaurant with covered outdoor seating (terrace, balcony, side patio) increases its capacity meaningfully. The connection between indoor and outdoor — usually a sliding or bifold door system — is what makes that space useable in different weather. Restaurants with a properly built indoor-outdoor connection see noticeable revenue benefits from increased capacity, especially in pleasant months. Worth specifying as the project's highest-value element if your restaurant has the outdoor area.
Restaurant operators often ask about handling the daily cleaning chemicals. Restaurants use aggressive cleaning — strong detergents, occasional bleach, regular degreasing. uPVC handles all of this without damage. Hardware (handles, locks) needs to be kept dry of cleaning solution to prevent slow corrosion of internal parts, but the frame surface is essentially chemical-resistant. We sometimes recommend stainless steel hardware upgrades for heavy-cleaning environments — adds about ₹2,000 per opening but extends hardware life significantly.
A second common conversation is about the installation timing for a working restaurant. Most operators can't close for 7-10 days of installation. We do restaurant installs phase-by-phase — kitchen first during a closed Sunday-Monday, dining room over evening closures, outdoor connection on a weekend. The total project takes 2-3 weeks elapsed but only 4-6 days of actual restaurant closure spread across that time. Discuss schedule at the quote stage.
The third question, raised by restaurant interior designers, is about coordinating window aesthetic with the restaurant's design theme. Frame colour, glazing pattern, hardware finish — all can be coordinated with the restaurant's overall design language. Industrial-themed restaurants suit anthracite or black frames; traditional South Indian restaurants suit woodgrain; modern minimalist suits clean white. Bring the design brief at measurement and we'll work to it.
Restaurant projects start with walking through each zone — kitchen, dining, outdoor — and discussing the specific requirements of each. The three zones get treated as three sub-projects.
Survey includes scheduling conversation — when can we work in each zone without significantly affecting restaurant operations? The schedule is usually as important as the spec.
Quote breaks down by zone so you can stage the work if needed. Kitchen first is sometimes the priority; outdoor connection first sometimes is.
Restaurant installs run with tight coordination — daily morning briefings before service, careful cleaning between zones, regular checks that completed work isn't being damaged by adjacent ongoing work.
Related guides covering this topic from other angles — different products, applications, or contexts.
Tell us about the restaurant — kitchen layout, dining zones, outdoor seating. We'll walk through and propose zone by zone.