There’s a huge range of different types of loft conversions. The most common are dormer and skylight or Velux conversions. There are also hip to gable and mansard conversions. The type of loft conversion that’s most suitable for your property will depend on the style of roof and the size of your loft.
West Linton
West Linton is a town and also civil parish in southerly Scotland, on the A702. It was formerly in the region of Peeblesshire, yet because local government re-organisation in the mid-1990s it is currently part of Scottish Borders. A number of its homeowners are travelers, owing to the village's proximity to Edinburgh, which is 16 miles (26 km) to the north eastern. West Linton has a long history, and holds an annual conventional festival called the Whipman Play. The town of Linton is of old beginning. Its name derives from a Celtic component (cognate with the modern-day Irish Gaelic linn, Scottish Gaelic linne, and contemporary Welsh "Llyn") suggesting a lake or pool, a pool in a river, or a network (as in Loch Linnhe, part of which is called An Linne Dhubh, the black swimming pool, or Dublin, an Anglicisation of dubh and also linn, suggesting black pool) and the Gaelic "dun" Welsh "racket"), for a citadel, strengthened place, or armed forces camp (pertaining to the modern-day English community, using the Saxon "tun", a ranch or collection of dwellings), as well as is obviously ideal, as the village appears to have actually been surrounded by lakes, swimming pools and also marshes. At one time it was known as Lyntoun Roderyck, identified maybe with Roderyck or Riderch, King of Strathclyde, whose territory included this area, or with a local chieftain of that name. The Scottish Gaelic version of the name is a partial translation, Ruairidh being a Gaelic kind of Roderick. The prefix "West" was acquired several centuries later on to clear up the difference from East Linton in East Lothian.