Gas hob in kitchen with no external window

Gas hob in kitchen with no external window

Author
Discussion

Jonboy_t

Original Poster:

5,038 posts

184 months

Friday 4th September 2015
quotequote all
We're selling our house at the moment and one thing that has been picked up during surveys etc is that we have a gas hob in the kitchen thst has no windows that go directly outside. Apparently this is a thing? We do have two patio doors and a double window in the room, but they open out into our conservatory.

The buyer has asked us to 'rectify' this before they consider exchange, but I have absolutely no idea what she thinks I'm going to do about it?! I'll happily take a hammer to the wall (once we've exchanged) and knock a brick out if it shuts her up, but other than that, what are we supposed to do?

The conservatory was built a few years after the hob was installed (5-ish years before we bought the place) so would have been fully compliant at the time, but I'm not sure when/if this regulation came into force and therefore if I can argue the toss that it's only non-compliant as the regs changed since it was done?

Will be speaking with the solicitors on Monday, but would be handy if any kindly gas man on here might be able to shed some light on this so I'm armed with some facts before I tell her to do one!

Jonboy_t

Original Poster:

5,038 posts

184 months

Friday 4th September 2015
quotequote all
Cheers chaps. Was hoping it was a new reg so I could tell her to shove it frown.

Still think I'm going to advise her to lick my left one and send her a link to an electric hob at Currys! Bugs me more than anything that we're 8 weeks into the process and now she's pulling out the problem cards - the survey was done 6 weeks ago!

Anywho, thanks for the advice, exactly what I needed thumbup

Jonboy_t

Original Poster:

5,038 posts

184 months

Saturday 5th September 2015
quotequote all
littlebasher said:
R1 Indy said:
Would it be just as easy/cheap to just fit the cheapest electric hob you can get your hands on? you can even get 13A ones if you don't have a 32A supply.
That's the way i'd go as well..problem solved!
That's probably the answer (although she will be paying!), there's already a connection there for the electric cooker so I guess there must be a way for a sparky to connect them in.

Jonboy_t

Original Poster:

5,038 posts

184 months

Saturday 5th September 2015
quotequote all
andy43 said:
uluru said:
We rented a house where they'd simply chopped 5 inches off the back door (which led into the conservatory) to get the boiler signed off!
Please do this! Dear Buyer, problem has now been rectified at our expense...
You have no idea how tempted I am!!

All joking aside, would that actually achieve anything in terms of compliance? If the door led into the conservatory, it's still not opening directly outside? We have a sliding patio door that goes into the conservatory that hasn't been closed for 5+ years. No skin off my nose if it wasn't there at all, so I could whip that off and job jobbed?