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Clyde 3978 · Casey

Window furnishings for new-build homes in Clyde

We fit curtains, blinds and shutters across the south-east growth corridor every week, including the new releases through Clyde and the surrounding Casey estates. Most of what you're reading below comes from doing exactly that, in the same builds you're moving into.

What we know about Clyde homes

Clyde's growth corridor is built largely by the major volume builders — Metricon, Henley, Simonds, Carlisle, Burbank and Boutique Homes — and the homes share a recognisable profile. Most are double-storey four-bedroom designs on 350-500 sqm lots, with two-tone facades, a small front porch, and stacker doors opening onto a courtyard at the rear. The block orientation runs roughly east-west on most streets, which means the courtyards take heavy afternoon sun and the front-facing upstairs bedrooms heat up fast through summer.

Clyde 3978 sits at the transition between the established Cranbourne area to the west and the brand-new releases through Clyde North to the north. The mix you get here is broader than the surrounding suburbs — some legacy rural blocks alongside recent infill developments, plus the larger growth-corridor estates spilling over from the Clyde North side. Street orientations vary, so the right product for each window depends on which release you're in.

What this means at the in-home measure: we don't assume one product mix for every home in Clyde. A late-2000s home on the Cranbourne side typically asks for a different solution than a 2024 two-storey on the Clyde North side. We'll walk through both your floor plan and the orientation of the worst-facing windows before we recommend anything.

What gets fitted most often in this part of the corridor

The configuration we install most often through Clyde and the surrounding estates is roughly: Plantation shutters to the street-facing front rooms (covenant-friendly, consistent across the facade, blocks the afternoon sun); blockout roller blinds throughout the bedrooms with sheer curtains layered over them in the main bedroom and formal living; double rollers on the rooms facing the rear courtyard; motorisation on the void or stairwell glazing where reach is the problem.

What a realistic Clyde budget looks like

For a typical new-build home in Clyde, here's the indicative range we quote at the in-home measure. These figures are guides, not a quote — your written quote after the measure is the binding figure.

  • Blockout roller blinds throughout a 3-bedroom single-storey home — $1,200 to $1,800 supplied and installed.
  • Blockout roller blinds throughout a 4-bedroom double-storey home — $2,400 to $2,900 supplied and installed.
  • Sheer curtains in the main living and bedroom windows — $3,000 to $4,000 supplied and installed.
  • Plantation shutters on the street-facing windows — $100 to $1,000 per window, with the average sitting around $299 per square metre for a quality finish.
  • External roller shutters on the worst-facing windows — $500 to $1,000 per window base spec, or $800 to $1,200 per window with motor and electrical install included.
  • Motorisation on void or stairwell glazing — built into the per-blind price on those openings, or $180 to $280 to retrofit an existing blind with a battery motor.

Pricing on this page is indicative. Full pricing policy →

Estates near Clyde

Specific estates near Clyde that we've fitted homes in include Eve Estate, Selandra Rise, Brompton, Five Farms and Smiths Lane. The fit-out is broadly the same across these releases, but the covenant rules and the orientation of the streets matter at the suburb level — both of which we'll walk through at the in-home measure.

When to book the in-home measure

Lock-up stage is the right time to ring us. The windows are in their final position, the plaster is done, and we measure to the millimetre. Most of the corridor homes we've fitted have been measured four to six weeks before handover — comfortable for manufacture and install, with everything ready for the day you get the keys. We work the south-east growth corridor on a regular weekly run. Most weeks we're in the area for measures and installs, and the drive time from Preston means we'll always give you a realistic arrival window and combine appointments in the same pocket on the same day where possible.

Covenants and estate rules

Several of the south-east growth corridor estates have covenant rules that restrict what external treatments can sit on the front of the house. Smiths Lane and Five Farms are the strictest; other estates allow more flexibility. We've fitted across all of them, so bring your covenant document to the in-home measure and we'll walk through what's allowed. See our estate covenant guide for the corridor-by-corridor breakdown.

On the builder's window-furnishings allowance

If your builder has offered a window-furnishings allowance, read the spec carefully before accepting it. In our experience, builder-supplied window furnishings are typically the cheapest budget product fitted at a premium price. The cleanest move is to negotiate the allowance out of the contract and bring the same scope to us independently. See our new-build inclusions guide for the full pattern.

Book your free in-home measure

If you're building or recently moved into Clyde 3978 or anywhere through the Casey growth corridor, book a free in-home measure. We bring samples, we measure every opening, and we give you a written quote that's yours for thirty days.

Book free in-home measure

Nearby suburbs we cover: Clyde North · Cranbourne East · Cranbourne South · Tooradin.

Related reading: New-build inclusions guide · Blockout roller blinds · Plantation shutters · Sheer curtains · Pricing policy.