Hi all
Found some good questions and answers here, so signed up!
I live in an upper Tyneside flat (common in Newcastle: a terraced house with 2 front doors next to each other. One goes upstairs, the other to the ground floor flat).
The water pressure in our upper flat is often terrible. As soon as the GFF neighbour does anything with water, our pressure goes to nothing.
I don't remember this ever being a problem in other upper Tyneside flats I've lived in. However, this flat (and the GFF, both owned by the same landlord) show many signs of botched, roughly-done interior jobs (e.g. kitchen, bathroom). And a very competent engineer who came to replace the central heating boiler found that he had to get into the downstairs neighbours' flat to turn off the water supply. If I remember right, he found that there was just one water supply for both flats, with one stopcock.
Is this arrangement - a single water supply - usual with Tyneside flats, or is this just a weird one? Like I said, I never noticed it as a problem in other flats. But since I'm thinking of buying an upper Tyneside flat, I'm wondering whether this is a possible problem to look out for.
thanks!
Found some good questions and answers here, so signed up!
I live in an upper Tyneside flat (common in Newcastle: a terraced house with 2 front doors next to each other. One goes upstairs, the other to the ground floor flat).
The water pressure in our upper flat is often terrible. As soon as the GFF neighbour does anything with water, our pressure goes to nothing.
I don't remember this ever being a problem in other upper Tyneside flats I've lived in. However, this flat (and the GFF, both owned by the same landlord) show many signs of botched, roughly-done interior jobs (e.g. kitchen, bathroom). And a very competent engineer who came to replace the central heating boiler found that he had to get into the downstairs neighbours' flat to turn off the water supply. If I remember right, he found that there was just one water supply for both flats, with one stopcock.
Is this arrangement - a single water supply - usual with Tyneside flats, or is this just a weird one? Like I said, I never noticed it as a problem in other flats. But since I'm thinking of buying an upper Tyneside flat, I'm wondering whether this is a possible problem to look out for.
thanks!