Your LPG storage tank will need to go outside your property, possibly underground if you have limited space. There are planning rules that restrict where you can put your tank, especially if your property is listed or on designated land. Take a look at our planning permission article to find out more.
Isle Of Bute
The Isle of Bute, known as Bute, is an island in the Firth of Clyde in Scotland, UK. It is split into highland and also lowland areas by the Highland Boundary Fault. Previously a constituent island of the bigger County of Bute, it is currently part of the council location of Argyll and Bute. Bute's resident population was 6,498 in 2011, a decline of just over 10% from the number of 7,228 recorded in 2001 against a history of Scottish island populations in its entirety growing by 4% to 103,702 for the exact same duration. The name "Bute" is of uncertain beginning. Watson and Mac an Tàilleir support a derivation from Old Irish bót ("fire"), possibly of signal fires. This reference to beacon fires may date from the Viking period, when the island was possibly known to the Norse as Bót. Other possible derivations consist of Brythonic budh ("corn"), "success", St Brendan, or both, his monastic cell. There is no likely derivation from Ptolemy's Ebudae. The island was also understood throughout the Viking age as Rothesay, perhaps referring to the personal name Roth or Roderick as well as the Old Norse suffix ey ("island"). This name was at some point taken by the major town on the island, whose Gaelic name is Baile Bhòid ("town of Bute").