-
The water tank you are talking about should be a fire water tank. It doesn't usually work, so there's no noise. There is no need to worry about load-bearing problems at all, and they are designed with structural calculations. There is no need to worry too much about water leakage, as the waterproofing of the foundation at the bottom of the tank is reinforced.
As a friend on the first floor said, the top floor will be hotter in summer, but with this water tank, it will be relatively cooler.
-
If you talk about Feng Shui, it's not good.
It's cooler to live in.
Purely personal opinion has no scientific basis.
-
I don't think so, I remember when I was a child, my husband's house had a water tank, I remember when I lived on the top floor, it was also a water tank, I didn't think it had any impact, and the building materials should be better than then.
The first thing to do is ask your property if you are allowed to do this, so that you don't have to reinstate it when you get it.
First of all, the developer must have considered the lighting problem before building the building, and there should be no problem; Secondly, in the case you mentioned, if the distance between the buildings is sufficient, there is no blocking.
It should be fine. If you're afraid, you can put a gossip round mirror on the door.
This is condensate, which needs to be modified by the retrofit unit.
Radiators aren't necessarily a waterway problem! Specifically, we have to see what is the reason for not going to the water. Most of these few unhot situations are due to the pipe being blocked.