I like the Hive system, it allows the boilers in built controls to monitor the return water temperature and so modulate the boiler, it does not need to be connected to the boiler ebus.
However the whole idea is every Hive TRV head is a zone, if any of the programmable heads demand heat, then the Hive wall thermostat will run the boiler.
So what is the point in zoning zones? Personally I would connect a duel Hive wall thermostat so the CH part opens all CH zone valves, and the DHW opens the hot water zone valve, and the TRV heads can do their job.
Without the TRV heads linking to Hive, it is rather useless in most houses, an on/off wall thermostat has two jobs in the main, easy assess switch to turn heating on/off, and a any cycling device to auto turn off heating on warm days, so why would anyone fit two, that's like having a RCD feed and RCD they are both doing the same job.
The idea was to zone houses so bedrooms could be divided from living rooms, that is OK when bedrooms are only used to sleep in, as soon as it is used for children to do home work in, it fails.
So this house over night all rooms at 17 degrees OK could set lower, could set to 10 degrees C, but lower it goes, longer it takes to warm up, so 8 am (we are retired) bedrooms set to 20 degrees C, however other upper floor rooms, office and craft room remain at 17 degrees, at 9 am the kitchen and dinning room are heated, and bedrooms switch back down, at 10 am living room switched up, dinning room back down, at 4 pm dinning room back on until 8 pm at 9 pm bedrooms go back up, at 11 pm all rooms down to 17 degrees.
Two points, one is every room individually controlled, second no room switched off, they are switched down, to do that the zone valve must modulate i.e. turn up/down, not off/on, it is OK to turn DHW off/on but not central heating, you want all controls to modulate.
OK there is a problem, the gas boiler will not modulate to zero, so you reach a point where it has to cycle, and you don't want it to cycle all summer long, so some where you want a thermostat that will turn it off in warm weather, but you don't need two thermostats.
OK there will be exceptions to the rule, I have a flat under the house heated by same boiler, since 95% time flat is only used for storage I do have a zone valve to turn off flat.
So in this house, thermostat turns zone valve on/off, zone valve turns pump and relay on/off relay turns boiler on/off, if I did not have two pumps, I would not need relays.
Idea is zone valve must open before pump can run, and pump and zone valves must be open/running before boiler starts, and one zone valve working will not trigger the pump on the other system, which is why it needs relays, so flat calling for heat will not cause any heat or pump to run for house.
So two up two down house OK zone valves, but zone valves cost around £50 each, so for extra £100 every room is independent, so why would anyone in their right mind use zone valves on two up, two down?
But I could be wrong, I never expected a conservative government but we have got one.