Fitting an Aga before a new kitchen!

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The story so far: we got forced to move out of our lovely house with Aga when violent drug dealers moved in next door and life became intolerable. Since then we have badly missed the Aga. So we found a good gas model for sale, got it dismantled and it's presently in pieces in the garage. The chimney specialist is coming soon to fit the stainless double-walled flue, which will go through the corner of a pokey little "office" above the kitchen. Above, it will exit through the roof to the required height with an anti downdraft cowl. Below, it will drop through the kitchen ceiling. It will be adjacent to one of the 3 main walls running across the house.

When we have recovered from that bill, we will call back the Aga specialist to reinstall it. We plan eventually to refurbish the entire horrible kitchen so with great pleasure we will chop a gap in the units to take the Aga. We have chipboard floors on polystyrene foam on concrete Bison beams & blocks. However TN Cooks in Skipton make a load-bearing Aga frame that has extending adjustable legs that go through the floor down to the concrete base. We will need to locate the gas pipe running under the boards towards the lounge and put in a T for the Aga feed. We will provide an air vent in the room as required. Eventually we will save up enough to fit a new kitchen around the Aga. (Maybe we'll just rob a bank!)

A few questions:

Are we completely stark-staring bonkers?

Would it help with the subsequent new kitchen installation if we cut the gap for the Aga in between the existing units, ie a standard distance from the end wall? We don't know exactly where the pipe will emerge from the ceiling but we do have a foot or so of leeway either way with the flue if need be, using 45 degree elbows.

Any other potential problems you can see with our plans? Both the Aga and the chimney specialist seem to think it can all be made to work.
 
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All sounds like hard work to me,wait untill the people are fitting the flue and get them to work out where it will enter the kitchen. Also get the plan view of the aga from the people who make it and give that to the flue installers so the two should align or at least be able to be connected with suitable fittings. Remember the flue should rise 600mm from the appliance vertically before it changes direction with an angle at a maximum of 45 degrees. otherwise get a firm to do all the work at once or two firms in conjunction with one another. hope this helps.
 
Thanks! We have the Aga dimensions. Luckily we have a good chimney specialist who has done excellent work for us in the past on 3 stoves and who is doing the flue, along with an experienced Aga fitter who dismantled the Aga and will reassemble it for us when we're ready.

At the moment it's in the garage looking like a pile of Land Rover parts!

(Similar level of technology, it must be said!)
 

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