ᐅ Does an external chimney need to extend all the way down to the basement?

Created on: 25 May 2015 19:29
A
Abbygale
A
Abbygale
25 May 2015 19:29
Hello everyone,

I have a quick but very important question for us:

We want a tiled stove on the exterior wall of the ground floor (building on a slope). The architect plans to extend the external stainless steel chimney all the way down to the basement or lower ground level. However, this limits us a lot – an entire balcony door would have to be removed because of this.

My question is: Is it necessary for the chimney to go all the way down, or can it start directly at the fireplace on the ground floor?

Thank you very much for your answers. I would like to have the right arguments ready when I speak with the architect tomorrow.
Y
ypg
25 May 2015 19:43
The cleaning access through the inspection hatch should be ensured without making it a balancing act for the chimney sweep. I imagine that is the reasoning behind it.

Best regards, Yvonne
S
Sebastian79
25 May 2015 21:39
You need to clarify this with the local chimney sweep—not with the architect.

For solid fuels, a damper is usually installed both at the fireplace and at the top of the chimney—although this might be different for stainless steel flue pipes.

By doing this, we avoided installing a chimney draught into the basement, saving about 400 euros.
wrobel27 May 2015 08:48
Hello

As a rule, it is usually not necessary to extend the chimney down to the basement level. However, if possible, I would try to avoid using a stainless steel chimney and avoid locating it outside the building for technical and aesthetic reasons.

Olli
B
Bauexperte
27 May 2015 12:15
Hello Olli
wrobel schrieb:

If possible, I would try not to have the chimney made of stainless steel and not placed outside the building, for technical and aesthetic reasons.
Could you please explain why?

Regards, Bauexperte
S
Sebastian79
27 May 2015 12:52
At least visually, I can understand it – there is (subjectively) hardly anything more unattractive for a new build than this silver stove pipe.