Thanks Peter C, I checked up Part J of the building regs and it states that
"Flues should be vertical wherever possible and where a bend is necessary, it should not make an angle of more than 37.5° with the vertical." This worries me as the design my architect has done is a 2.8m section of flue running at 45-degrees to the vertical. On the architectural detail, it it just looks suspect.
Part J dates largely from the 1997 regulations, apart from some amendments.
Your archtiect should be aware of , and the flue should comply with, the Building Regulationss.
Many architects read Ivor H. Seeley in their formative years.
In the current edition section 5.1.2. Figure 5.1, Page 93 shows an elevations of the wall with the flue dotted in.
It cistes a 45-degree slopeas being the minimum acceptable.
This is a "picture" and many architects assimilate information better graphically than via text.
However, when you look at P. 97, "Flue Installation", in the second paragraph of that section it states; -
"Where bends are necessary, the angle of travel should be kept as steep as possible, preferably not less than 60°."
My reading of this is "sixty degree from the horizontal" - that is thirty degrees from the vertical.
This accords with the 37.5
° mentioned in the section you referred to above in Part J, on P.7;
"2.5 Direction - Flues should be vertical
wherever possible and where a bend is necessary, it
should not make an angle of more than 37.5° with
the vertical. Horizontal flue runs should be avoided
except in the case of a back outlet appliance, when
the length of the horizontal section should not
exceed 150 mm."
So gently berate him, but realise that the TGD are "guidance documents" and while they can give prima fascia compliance, they are not the only solutions.
Recommended minima of37.5° or 60°/30° may be desired, but that doesn't mean they are the only workable solution.
The real question for me is why you aren't simply; -
a) running it straight up abd using a built in wardrobe panel to hide it, or
b) projecting it to the outside of the wall and making an architectural feature out of the chimney.
For my money - well, its always
the clients money - there is nothing finer than a well-detailed chimney stack.
They are part of the language that defines a "house" separately from a modernist "box".
They are a vernacular feature of northern European architecture.
Still, you pays yer money and you makes yer choice.
FWIW
ONQ.