Going through renovations to our Edwardian terraced house and one thing we've been thinking about is the front north facing walls. They get quite cold to the touch in winter and I'm sure are a relatively big source of heat loss. The two rooms would be the lounge where most of the wall is a bay window... We've seen a big improvement since having the fireplace replaced and chimney blocked, and especially since having the bay roof redone with new tiles, lining and of course proper insulation. Not sure we would see much effect putting thermal lining paper in there seen as most of the external wall is actually the bay windows. We also have original coving on the ceiling and thick paper might ruin the look of that.
However, the front bedroom on the first floor has plenty of external wall as it is the whole width of the house circa 4.5m (by 2.8m high). It has two big uPVC sash windows (a few years old installed by the previous owners, double glazed and decent) but there's plenty of flat wall we think it might be useful to cover in thermal lining paper.
Has anyone installed it, is it worth the outlay?
However, the front bedroom on the first floor has plenty of external wall as it is the whole width of the house circa 4.5m (by 2.8m high). It has two big uPVC sash windows (a few years old installed by the previous owners, double glazed and decent) but there's plenty of flat wall we think it might be useful to cover in thermal lining paper.
Has anyone installed it, is it worth the outlay?