Best way to heat a freestanding room

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Bath
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Hello. I am converting a former garage into an office. It's around 23 square metres. Ideally I would like to install underfloor heating on the wooden subfloor. Is this adequate for a primary heat source? I like the carbon mats but I'm not sure if they are powerful enough (160 Watts/sq m). I'd rather not have to use screed if possible, and I do not want to install any plumbing - electric only. What is the best way of doing it, and should I look at storage or solid fuel heaters instead?
Cheers.
 
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Walls are breeze block and will be lined with insulation and plasterboard. It's got a flat, double-skinned tin roof held up by beams. The space under these will be filled with insulation and a plasterboard ceiling put up.
 
It would be a massive amount of work to fit an UFH which would give a maximum of about 1500 watts. Cost about £900 for materials plus a lot of work!

A cheaper and perhaps better solution would be a nice 2.6 kW rad! Cost about £200 for materials.

It would be timed at the same hours as the house with a rad as opposed to a UFH which would need to be heated two hours before its occupied!

Tony
 
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How about a 2 x 2kW thermostatically controlled, timed oil filled rads? Cost about £60 the pair, installation cost nuffink.
 
Sounds really good from a budget point of view. Will they be warm enough to heat an office to work in all day?
 
Great. Thanks to all for your help. Oil-filled dragons it is!
 

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