Kdoowthawash
New Member
Hello,
I'm writing from the Czech Sudetenland, and it can get cold here - for Europe anyway - down to about -20 in Winter sometimes. I have an apartment on the top floor of our little block of flats. It's the only flat on the whole top floor. Directly below some of it is my wife's flat where we now live, and the other three flats are owned by a company and are basically empty year round. There's also very little or no thermal insulation in the building. The second winter here my pipes froze and cracked. I then got the supply pipe to my flat capped so I have no problem now but also no water up there. It's difficult to get agreement for work done to this building, and realistically it could be many years till I can get agreement to install insulation up there. (For whatever reasons, the owner of the other three flats doesn't seem to want work done). It all sounds grim, I know, but we live here and as we say, an Englishman's home is his castle ... so I'd like to find ways round the difficulties and stay here.
So my question -
is there a way to design the plumbing in my flat so that in a cold winter the system can be drained?
I have an idea:
I'm imagining a thermally insulated box where the mains comes into the flat. In that box would be the water meter and its shut-off valve, and then after that the pipe would branch, and one pipe would lead off directly into the waste water system - it would have its own shut-off valve of course! But the main supply pipe would go on out of the insulated box to supply the flat. So around late December, I could open the box, close of the mains supply, open the valve to the waste system and drain what's there. Then I would empty out anything else like taps and so on in the flat. If I placed the box right, it would take up some of the heat from the centrally heated space below where we live, which would also help keep the metere and pipes in it above zero. Does this sound feasible?
Or is there another way?
I'm writing from the Czech Sudetenland, and it can get cold here - for Europe anyway - down to about -20 in Winter sometimes. I have an apartment on the top floor of our little block of flats. It's the only flat on the whole top floor. Directly below some of it is my wife's flat where we now live, and the other three flats are owned by a company and are basically empty year round. There's also very little or no thermal insulation in the building. The second winter here my pipes froze and cracked. I then got the supply pipe to my flat capped so I have no problem now but also no water up there. It's difficult to get agreement for work done to this building, and realistically it could be many years till I can get agreement to install insulation up there. (For whatever reasons, the owner of the other three flats doesn't seem to want work done). It all sounds grim, I know, but we live here and as we say, an Englishman's home is his castle ... so I'd like to find ways round the difficulties and stay here.
So my question -
is there a way to design the plumbing in my flat so that in a cold winter the system can be drained?
I have an idea:
I'm imagining a thermally insulated box where the mains comes into the flat. In that box would be the water meter and its shut-off valve, and then after that the pipe would branch, and one pipe would lead off directly into the waste water system - it would have its own shut-off valve of course! But the main supply pipe would go on out of the insulated box to supply the flat. So around late December, I could open the box, close of the mains supply, open the valve to the waste system and drain what's there. Then I would empty out anything else like taps and so on in the flat. If I placed the box right, it would take up some of the heat from the centrally heated space below where we live, which would also help keep the metere and pipes in it above zero. Does this sound feasible?
Or is there another way?