I’m staying in an apartment temporarily and I have absolutely no idea how it is heated. It’s a two-bedroom apartment. There is no thermostat. There are no vents. There is one radiator in the apartment’s living room, at the front and down the hall from the bedrooms, and one radiator in the bathroom.
I have felt every wall in my bedroom. All of them are cool. The floor is also a normal temperature.
And yet, despite it being at or below freezing most nights in the past month, I can be in my bedroom without a shirt on and be comfortable. It might be nice to be a little warmer, but I don’t feel cold or anything.
I am mystified. How is it being heated?
Perhaps adjacent/lower apartments are heated and are leaking enough heat to you.
Would the walls and floor still be cold if they were doing that? I honestly have no idea how that would work.
Are you sure it is?
I’m not sure how else it stays that warm when it is below freezing outside.
i don’t think it is heated.
i leave the heater in my bedroom of all year. when i leave the door open it is just a bit colder that the rest of the flat.
So it’s just really good insulation?
It’s probably just good insulation
I think the issue has s largely been explored and solved but I’d like to add something to the mix.
Complexes have hot water pipes running from the water heaters on the lowest floor up to all the suites. Usually they are stationed somewhere around the center of the main building, sandwiched between a commons hallway wall and an apartment wall.
The amount of heat that these can radiate is insane, especially if there’s a hot water circulation system in the building.
Good insulation in walls and ceiling
Sounds like a job for an IR camera or Polygondenimland? https://lemmy.world/post/25404145
Checked the temperature of the ceiling?
The ceilings here are super high. I wouldn’t be able to reach it. Would a heated ceiling be all that efficient?
Are you on the ground floor? If not then maybe whatever is below you is really warm and the heat is coming up through the floor. But I guess in that case the floor would feel warmer.
I am not on the ground floor, and I thought maybe it would be some under-floor heating thing like you are saying, but I have walked all over the room in bare feet and felt no heat in the floor.
I have floor heating, and have set it to very low (almost off). It’s freezing outside, but in here I can walk around in t-shirt and barefoot. The floor does not feel warm, it just doesn’t feel really cold.
Maybe that’s the the same case for your apartment. Though I don’t know why there would also be radiators in the living room and bathroom. Maybe the heat from below is just warm enough to have the same effect.
British magic, specifically.