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Can/Should I remove an Air Vent?
AA1985
Posts: 3 Newbie
We have recently bought a late Victorian property. The first floor room that will become our children's bedroom has been used for the last 20 years as a lounge. It has a gas fire in the fireplace (working chimney). I am having the gas fire removed (although leaving the decorative surround in place as a feature). I understand I need to put something in the chimney that still allows for ventilation so I don't get damp problems in the chimney breast. In addition to this there is a very large air vent in the corner of the room. It is very draughty and as it is on the front of the house also very noisy with traffic outside (not to mention pollution). Since there will no longer be any working fireplace in the room (gas or any other combustable) can I simply remove the air vent and block it up before we plaster the room? Is there any other reason (other than the gas appliance) that it was there? I appreciate the need to let old houses breathe but this thing is huge and I want the children's bedroom not to be cold and draughty! Many thanks for any advice you can give me
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Comments
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The large vent was needed to allow enough air into the room to feed the gas fire. If you remove this fire you no longer need this vent.0
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The large vent was needed to allow enough air into the room to feed the gas fire. If you remove this fire you no longer need this vent.
I have recently covered the chimney vent in my living room, I believe it has helped in keeping the room warm. I would not cover the vent permanently, during heavy rain water will come down the chimney, so ventilation will be a good thing.
You can fit cowls to stop rain coming down the chimney. My bedrooms have no chimney vents, but they do have moveable vents on the walls.0 -
Do your windows have trickle vents?Changing the world, one sarcastic comment at a time.0
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I would block the vent in the external wall off and then block the chimney off and just put a vent from the room to the chimney.
An old house should leak air sufficiently to allow a draught to keep the chimney dry.I have a lot of problems with my neighbours, they hammer and bang on the walls sometimes until 2 or 3 in the morning - some nights I can hardly hear myself drilling
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Rain is never a problem with chimneys, they are designed to absorb the very little rain that gets in them.sevenhills wrote: »I have recently covered the chimney vent in my living room, I believe it has helped in keeping the room warm. I would not cover the vent permanently, during heavy rain water will come down the chimney, so ventilation will be a good thing.
You can fit cowls to stop rain coming down the chimney. My bedrooms have no chimney vents, but they do have moveable vents on the walls.
The vents are often removed or covered when gas fires are ripped out.0 -
Take it outI'm only here while I wait for Corrie to start.
You get no BS from me & if I think you are wrong I WILL tell you.0 -
Im not sure what a trickle vent is?0
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Please do replace with other forms of ventilation, for example throwing the windows open daily. Damp stale air has the potential to harm your children's health more than a cool bedroom temperature.
If pollution is known to be a major issue on your street, there are ventilation devices that install in the wall and filter/ slightly warm the incoming air. These are generally designed to be 'on' 24/7, not least so they can be suitably quiet when running.
HTH!Declutterbug-in-progress.⭐️⭐️⭐️ ⭐️⭐️0
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