I'm buying a flat which was formerly part of a Victorian house, with an original fireplace which has been decommissioned. Separately, I' looking at moving to a large Victorian house which has fireplaces in every room... the owner tells me one is a multifuel stove, another has been converted to gas, and the rest no longer work. In both houses it seems like the chimneys are still present and in the breasts appear to be there too.
I'm unclear what people actually do to an existing chimney/flue/fireplace in such cases? Do they just block off both ends or would the flue ever be filled in? Maybe there are various options?
In different cases, can previously working fire-places be re-opened and what is involved? Is there a difference if I want an open fire Vs some sort of wood/coal-burning stove in the fireplace?
I don't know really much about how traditional chimneys OR new ones work, where can I find this out? I believe modern systems fit a metal pipe that is much narrower than the chimney, for instance, but I've never seen inside a chimney properly!
Any useful information, anecdotes and advice welcomed as we consider at the back of our minds whether to bring some of these back into service.
I'm unclear what people actually do to an existing chimney/flue/fireplace in such cases? Do they just block off both ends or would the flue ever be filled in? Maybe there are various options?
In different cases, can previously working fire-places be re-opened and what is involved? Is there a difference if I want an open fire Vs some sort of wood/coal-burning stove in the fireplace?
I don't know really much about how traditional chimneys OR new ones work, where can I find this out? I believe modern systems fit a metal pipe that is much narrower than the chimney, for instance, but I've never seen inside a chimney properly!
Any useful information, anecdotes and advice welcomed as we consider at the back of our minds whether to bring some of these back into service.