Ny legitimate reason to have a direct vent between utility room and attic

attichvacvent

I've been doing some sealing and insulating in my attic, and discovered a purpose built vent directly from the utility room into the attic space. See most of these photos

Vent in attic

The house is in a townhome/condo; it is second floor over the garages, so I don't have a basement. The utility room (furnace, water heater, laundry) opens directly into the kitchen. Two registers in the utility room open directly into into the wall space, the top of which space had a vent pipe attached to keep the loose insulation out.

Vent in utility room

Does this make any sense at all? If it does have a purpose, is there a better way to accomplish it than a hole in my ceiling?

Best Answer

If the furnace and water heater are gas powered, it would be to provide adequate airflow for their combustion so that you don't get carbon monoxide forming in the utility room.

Here's a link with some information. An excerpt:

The heating appliances are fully isolated from the living space with partitions. Figure 1 provides two vents to the outside, one within a foot of the ceiling and one within a foot of the floor. If vertical ducts are used to bring combustion air to the appliance each vent should be sized at one square inch of free vent area per 4000 BTUH of the appliance input rating.

(This is based on a half-remembered long-ago conversation with a service person working on my furnace and heater, which are in the center of my mostly-unfinished basement: I mentioned framing in a utility room around them and he said not to for that reason).