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.
Swanscombe
Swanscombe is a village in the District of Dartford in Kent, England. It lies east of Dartford and north-west of Gravesend, in the civil parish of Swanscombe and Greenhithe. At the 2001 UK census, the Swanscombe selecting ward had a population of 6,418. Swanscombe was necessary in the early history of cement. The first concrete production works near Swanscombe were opened at Northfleet by James Parker, around 1792, making "Roman concrete" from cement stone brought from the Isle of Sheppey. James Frost opened an operate at Swanscombe in 1825, making use of chalk from Galley Hill, having patented a new concrete called British Cement. The Swanscombe plant was consequently obtained by John Bazley White & Co, which came to be the largest part of Blue Circle Industries when it formed in 1900. It ultimately shut down in 1990. Between 1840 as well as 1930 it was the biggest cement plant in Britain. By 1882 numerous concrete producers were operating across the north Kent area, yet the resulting dirt pollution drove the people of Swanscombe to take lawsuit versus the neighborhood cement jobs. In spite of various technical developments, the trouble lingered right into the 1950s, with telegraph lines over an inch thick in white dirt. Modern concrete kilns in Kent utilizing smokeshafts 170 m (550 feet) in height are currently stated to be the cleanest on the planet. However, the neighbouring Medway towns are reported to be one of the most polluted occupied location in the UK, and the concrete market adds to acid rain in Scandinavia.