Why This Matters
Perforated film achieves one-way privacy through a simple optical principle: the interior is darker than the exterior during daylight hours, so the pattern is visible from outside but transparent from inside.
Near George M. Rush Stadium in San Francisco, west-facing windows at low afternoon sun angles drive the highest interior temperature increases. This is especially problematic for single-family home installations, which the most common residential application; window film reduces heat gain and protects furnishings.
The marine layer that covers coastal California in the morning burns off by midday, leaving afternoons with intense, direct sunlight. West-facing rooms without film are at their hottest between 2pm and 5pm.
The Solution
Solar control film is the workhorse of residential window film. It blocks 40–70% of solar heat gain while maintaining clear views and natural light.
Perforated film solves the privacy-versus-light tradeoff for street-facing rooms. The micro-hole pattern maintains outward visibility from inside while blocking the view from outside during daylight hours.
Retrofits existing glass with a low-emissivity coating for improved thermal performance.
Climate & Solar Performance
Properties near George M. Rush Stadium in Mission District, San Francisco experience afternoon heat gain conditions that make window film particularly effective. Low-E Retrofit Window Film is specifically engineered to address this solar exposure.
Effective against afternoon heat gain
Rated for single-family home protection
Professional installers available in San Francisco
10–15 year manufacturer warranty
Installation Guide
Installation cost varies by window size, film grade, and local labor rates. Expect $8–$15 per square foot installed for quality solar control or ceramic films. A typical residential window runs $150–$400.
Install time
30–45 min
Per window
$150–$400
Cure time
30 days