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.
Kilmacolm
Kilmacolm is a town and also civil parish in the Inverclyde council location, as well as the historical area of Renfrewshire in the west central Lowlands of Scotland. It rests on the north slope of the Gryffe Valley, 7 1/2 miles (12.1 km) south-east of Greenock and around 15 miles (24 kilometres) west of the city of Glasgow. The village has a population of around 4,000 as well as belongs to a wider civil parish which covers a large country hinterland of 15,000 hectares (150 km2; 58 sq mi) including within it the smaller negotiation of Quarrier's Village, initially developed as a 19th-century property orphans' home. The area surrounding the village was resolved in prehistoric times as well as became part of a feudal culture with the church separated between different estates for much of its background. The town itself continued to be little, providing services to nearby farm areas as well as acting as a spiritual center for the parish. The name of the village stems from the Scottish Gaelic Cill MoCholuim, indicating the commitment of its church to St Columba. The parish church was stated in a papal bull of 1225 revealing its subservience to Paisley Abbey, and also it rests on the site of an ancient religious community dating to the 5th or 6th centuries. Once again in the 13th century, Duchal Castle was built in the church as well as is notable for being besieged by King James IV of Scotland in 1489, following the resident Lyle family's assistance of an insurrection versus him. Feuding in between the worthy households of Kilmacolm was widespread in the Middle Ages, and also in the 16th and 17th centuries, the church once more pertained to the interest of the Crown for providing support to forbidden religious Covenanters. The personality of the village transformed substantially in the Victorian age, with the arrival of the train in Kilmacolm in 1869. Many of Kilmacolm's modern-day buildings were built between this day and the outbreak of World war. The emergence of such transportation web links enabled the village to broaden as an upscale dorm room village offering the nearby city centres of Glasgow, Paisley and Greenock. The economic situation of the village showed this population adjustment, relocating far from its standard dependence on agriculture to supplying tertiary industry solutions to locals and also visitors.