58limited
Well-known member
Carlstock
Why do new homes in the UK not have fireplaces? Are they out of style, too expensive, or is it a safety reason? I live on the coast of Texas, really doesn't get cold here but I love running my gas logs (sometimes in summer too). My house is 66 years old and has the original windows, so ventilation is not a problem. I don't want to upgrade to newer windows and these old ones are not that drafty. I just made my living room formal, as it originally was in 1940. The fireplace is the centerpiece, no TV in the room at all. I just bought a stained glass fireplace screen and it is really pleasant reading a book with the fire glowing behind the screen in the evenings. In college, my ONLY heat source in my drafty rented farm house was a reproduction (ie - not efficient at all) wood burning parlor stove. You would think that splitting wood in an ice storm to keep warm would have cured me of wanting fireplaces, but it didn't. I simply switched to gas instead of wood.
Why do new homes in the UK not have fireplaces? Are they out of style, too expensive, or is it a safety reason? I live on the coast of Texas, really doesn't get cold here but I love running my gas logs (sometimes in summer too). My house is 66 years old and has the original windows, so ventilation is not a problem. I don't want to upgrade to newer windows and these old ones are not that drafty. I just made my living room formal, as it originally was in 1940. The fireplace is the centerpiece, no TV in the room at all. I just bought a stained glass fireplace screen and it is really pleasant reading a book with the fire glowing behind the screen in the evenings. In college, my ONLY heat source in my drafty rented farm house was a reproduction (ie - not efficient at all) wood burning parlor stove. You would think that splitting wood in an ice storm to keep warm would have cured me of wanting fireplaces, but it didn't. I simply switched to gas instead of wood.