I’m posting this here because the project was way more expensive than I had anticipated.
Over a year ago I started taking out my massive brick fireplace and chimney stack. It was about 9 degrees off square (for aesthetics I presume) and was ~3’ x 5’ (~1x1.5M). This was an inefficient use of space, didn’t heat the house, and looked really outdated.
Turned out the upstairs ceiling was supported by the bricks, and the wife wanted to remove the wall next to it (it was the back of the kitchen, where the original owners installed the laundry hookups.
I just lit my first fire today after removing the first bricks in August of 2021.
Over a year ago I started taking out my massive brick fireplace and chimney stack. It was about 9 degrees off square (for aesthetics I presume) and was ~3’ x 5’ (~1x1.5M). This was an inefficient use of space, didn’t heat the house, and looked really outdated.
Turned out the upstairs ceiling was supported by the bricks, and the wife wanted to remove the wall next to it (it was the back of the kitchen, where the original owners installed the laundry hookups.
- Needed an engineer to spec out beams and posts to support the ceiling
- ran the plans through the permit system,
- relocated the laundry to the garage,
- moved the water supply and drain/vent about 6’ (2M),
- bring the holes in the roof, ceiling, and floor back to square,
- dispose of the bricks (thank you, Craigslist!),
- figure out which wood stove (1) is compliant with the new 2020 EPA high efficiency standards, (2) would legally fit in the cavity left by the old fireplace , and (3) heat the whole house (only one checked all boxes: the Lopi Evergreen)
- designed and built a non-combustible wood stove using metal studs and cement board,
- painted it with silicate paint because the wife wanted it to look like drywall,
- tiled the floor with slate (thank you, Craigslist!)
I just lit my first fire today after removing the first bricks in August of 2021.
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