worldwidewebs Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago We're going through the detailed design stage of a Danwood house build in Scotland and the MVHR ducting layout they've come up with means that although there is a decent-sized, dedicated technical room, a lot of ducting is visible in the utility room. They even wanted to put the MVHR in the utility room itself, despite the technical room being directly next to it! The UK-based guys are very helpful but the Polish team seem either unwilling or unable to meet our needs so I'm trying to work out my available options and next steps. I'd be keen to hear whether anyone has built a Danwood house and didn't have an MVHR installed. Also, for those that do have a Danwood build with an MVHR, would you be able to upload a photo showing the unit and the ducting to the point it 'disappears' behind walls and ceilings?
Ed_ Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago I'm going to be building a Danwood house. Some things are flexible and other things definitely aren't and it is difficult to tell beforehand which will be which, they have a build system and that is that. I've attached a photo i took of the system in a completed house I visited.
kandgmitchell Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago We have that same unit as pictured but in the services room. The ducts leave via the utility room which has a false ceiling with all ductwork hidden from view. We have found the MVHR system to be very good and we saw that as a positive in the Danwood offering. The one issue is the location of the outlets in the floors, could do with them nearer the walls but as they're placed under windows it's not that bad.
jack Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 1 hour ago, worldwidewebs said: We're going through the detailed design stage of a Danwood house build in Scotland and the MVHR ducting layout they've come up with means that although there is a decent-sized, dedicated technical room, a lot of ducting is visible in the utility room. They even wanted to put the MVHR in the utility room itself, despite the technical room being directly next to it! The UK-based guys are very helpful but the Polish team seem either unwilling or unable to meet our needs so I'm trying to work out my available options and next steps. I'd be keen to hear whether anyone has built a Danwood house and didn't have an MVHR installed. Also, for those that do have a Danwood build with an MVHR, would you be able to upload a photo showing the unit and the ducting to the point it 'disappears' behind walls and ceilings? Have you asked why they're making these decisions? I'm sure they aren't doing it just to be difficult. It could be about routing needs, including competition from power, electricity, and water routing, interference from building elements such as joists, and/or limitations of their build system. In our case, we'd initially planned to put the MVHR in the pantry, but ended up moving it to the plant room right next door. Admittedly, a large part of the need for that location was my fault, because I didn't give nearly enough thought to the plant room layout before everything (drainage, power, water) was permanently positioned when the slab was poured. In the end (and possibly more relevant to your situation), we also decided to move the manifolds into the utility room, largely because it was clear we'd really struggle routing the per-room ducts around all the other power, water and drainage passing through the ceiling in the plant room. Similar issues could apply even to a couple of large ducts, depending on the routes they might need to take. I suppose my point is that there's generally a reason for every decision. They should be able to articulate that reason. If you end up with the MVHR in the utility room, you could box it in. We did that with ours in the pantry. It just looks like another set of cupboard doors. 12 minutes ago, kandgmitchell said: The ducts leave via the utility room which has a false ceiling with all ductwork hidden from view. We did similar with a dropped ceiling below the manifolds in our utility room, with flush access panels for maintenance if needed. It worked well for use. The access panels have have never been opened in the decade since we moved in.
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