S
Sarah Stickland
Hi,
New member - in fact have joined specifically to ask this question! Is anyone aware of any regulation (planning, Building control or anything else) that says you cannot have a boiler flue exiting to the front of a house? Planning on installing a new boiler and moving it from where the existing one is, and having the flue going through the front of the house is the best solution that we can see, but a plumber we contacted said it wouldn't be allowed. The house isn't listed or in a conservation area.
The only regulations I can find online relate to the position of the terminal in relation to the eaves (i.e. has to be a certain distance below the eaves/gutter). The plumber we've spoken to suggests going into loft and out through side wall of house - problem is that we want to put an extension there eventually, which would mean significantly extending the flue. In general going through the front seems a much better option. Another option would be vertically through the roof, but then you get into waterproofing issues and I'd prefer to leave the roof intact.
Any advice?
Thanks,
Sarah
New member - in fact have joined specifically to ask this question! Is anyone aware of any regulation (planning, Building control or anything else) that says you cannot have a boiler flue exiting to the front of a house? Planning on installing a new boiler and moving it from where the existing one is, and having the flue going through the front of the house is the best solution that we can see, but a plumber we contacted said it wouldn't be allowed. The house isn't listed or in a conservation area.
The only regulations I can find online relate to the position of the terminal in relation to the eaves (i.e. has to be a certain distance below the eaves/gutter). The plumber we've spoken to suggests going into loft and out through side wall of house - problem is that we want to put an extension there eventually, which would mean significantly extending the flue. In general going through the front seems a much better option. Another option would be vertically through the roof, but then you get into waterproofing issues and I'd prefer to leave the roof intact.
Any advice?
Thanks,
Sarah