Chimney Positioning New Construction - Tips

  • Erstellt am 2020-04-11 10:07:25

canerol

2020-04-11 10:07:25
  • #1
Hello everyone,

We are currently building a single-family house and have decided to install a chimney; we plan to have a fireplace installed in our living room. At the moment, the positioning of the chimney and the placement of the fireplace is giving me some headaches. As can be seen in the plans, the chimney is positioned in the living room at the corner towards the kitchen. We would like to have a panoramic fireplace installed in the living room. We chose the position of the chimney because it leads into the basement room, and the chimney sweep can remove the ashes through the cleaning door of the chimney in the basement. This way, no ash dirt accumulates in the living room.

My question is, how is the fireplace connected to the chimney (pipe connection)? As can be seen in the pictures, there is a gap between the fireplace and the chimney in the living room; we would like to close this gap with dry elements so that the pipe connection to the fireplace is no longer visible. Is it that simple? Do you have any other ideas where the fireplace and chimney could be better positioned?

We have been offered the following chimney system:
Simo Quadral DS-FB chimney system external dimensions 40 x 40 cm MR18

Desired fireplace:
Three-sided panoramic fireplace (manufacturer not yet known)



 

K1300S

2020-04-11 12:16:55
  • #2
Just to clarify again: Do you really mean a masonry chimney when you say "Kamin"? Then it will probably be designed in such a way that the flue pipe disappears "inside" the chimney (i.e., within the masonry construction). Otherwise, we are talking about a wood-burning stove. I’m not very familiar with that, but so far I have only seen versions where the flue pipe is exposed. I can’t say whether it is permissible to enclose it.

Best regards

K1300S
 

canerol

2020-04-11 12:30:03
  • #3
Thank you for the clarification, we want a wood stove, so to set up a finished wood stove and not have one built...
 

Curly

2020-04-11 19:39:14
  • #4
I would raise your room doors to 2.13m, it costs hardly more, is also a standard size, and looks much better.

Best regards
Sabine
 

11ant

2020-04-11 20:39:24
  • #5
Isn't such a wood-burning stove a bit heavy as bling-bling in a ten-by-ten old town villa?
 

canerol

2020-04-11 20:47:00
  • #6
What exactly do you mean by "heavy bling-bling"? There are also smaller sized panoramic wood-burning stoves.
 

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