R
Rahul
Hello,
I am trying to replace a 21 year old G rated boiler in my Edwardian end of terrace house. The combi boiler is in the kitchen on the outer wall. The flue exits into the street on the other side.
The British Gas engineer who came by said that the flue was extending outside my property so it was breaking some new building regulations, therefore he could not replace my boiler with a new one. He said the flue pipe should be within 300mm of my property boundary, but since this wall formed the boundary of my end of terrace house, it is in effect outside my boundary and violating the rules. How is this applicable retrospectively if the house was built this way?
He is asking me to move all the plumbing to the other side of the kitchen so a new boiler can be fitted! This sounds a bit absurd to me. Any advise?
Regards,
Rahul.
I am trying to replace a 21 year old G rated boiler in my Edwardian end of terrace house. The combi boiler is in the kitchen on the outer wall. The flue exits into the street on the other side.
The British Gas engineer who came by said that the flue was extending outside my property so it was breaking some new building regulations, therefore he could not replace my boiler with a new one. He said the flue pipe should be within 300mm of my property boundary, but since this wall formed the boundary of my end of terrace house, it is in effect outside my boundary and violating the rules. How is this applicable retrospectively if the house was built this way?
He is asking me to move all the plumbing to the other side of the kitchen so a new boiler can be fitted! This sounds a bit absurd to me. Any advise?
Regards,
Rahul.