We just moved from a recently built apartment into a freshly refurbished rental house built in the 70-s. It has non-insulated cavity walls and minimal loft insulation, typical for that period. Ustairs gets terribly hot on warm days and very cold on cooler days, to the point that today, in June, we need to put central heating on (it is 13 degrees outside).
There is a large hallway with a stair leading on to another 2 floors. So the heat from downstairs quickly escapes to the top of the stairs, leaving downstairs very cold, even in the summer.
There used to be a radiator in the hallway, which was removed after re-configuring the property. The identical houses on the street still have large radiators in the hallways. The hallway has many doors, each one is almost flush against the wall, so there is no room for a plug-in oil radiator. A downstairs toilet in the hallway also has no radiator and gets very cold.
We have been asking the landlord to install at least a slim electric wall heater in the hallway. He keeps refusing saying that he used to live in the property himself (this was many years ago), and it was fine without a radiator in the hallway. Also, that previous tenants never complained.
The neighbours told us that before the renovation the property was in a bad state and used to be rented to poor quality tenants who trashed it further. They paid a lot less rent and no wonder did not expect it to be up-to-date.
I am sure rental regulations have changed these days and a hallway/star heating is a requirement rather than a luxury, together with a minimum temperature of 18 degrees on a day when it is 1 degree outside. Surely, this hallway would not comply.
What is the best way to get the landlord to agree to install a new wall heater? It is not as if we ask to insulate cavities and loft. We dread to think what it will be like in winter! We are in our 60-s and due to illnesses don't tolerate cold well at all. Also, comfortable temperature perception is very individual depending on whether you are fat or skinny and what you are used to, not to mention that some health conditions make you feel much colder.