First time poster here so be gentle...
I am trying to add a wood burning stove to my walk-out basement as supplemental and emergency backup heat. The basement is unconditioned and mostly unfinished... the walls exposed on the walk-out side are insulated. I am located just east of Atlanta, Georgia, so heating needs are low relative to more northern climates. My goal is to install a passive (non-blower) high efficiency wood burning stove(like the large Kuuma Sauna Stove), so I can heat the basement on an "as needed" basis and allow any excess heat to "drift" upstairs and supplement the heating on the main floor. My house is 5 years old and very well insulated.
Here is my current situation...
(broken image removed)
I would appreciate any ideas as to the best ways to approach this. I am a bang for the buck value guy, so don’t assume an unlimited budget…
Thanks in advance.

I am trying to add a wood burning stove to my walk-out basement as supplemental and emergency backup heat. The basement is unconditioned and mostly unfinished... the walls exposed on the walk-out side are insulated. I am located just east of Atlanta, Georgia, so heating needs are low relative to more northern climates. My goal is to install a passive (non-blower) high efficiency wood burning stove(like the large Kuuma Sauna Stove), so I can heat the basement on an "as needed" basis and allow any excess heat to "drift" upstairs and supplement the heating on the main floor. My house is 5 years old and very well insulated.
Here is my current situation...
- I have a Superior BR-42-2 "builder grade" fireplace on the main floor that we do not use or intend to use. I hate the inefficiency and mess of standard wood burning fireplaces…the fireplace has a Chimney Pillow inflated above the damper to seal the 8” metal chimney pipe. I assume it is a single wall metal flue, but cannot confirm at this time.
- The chase for the fireplace is located inside the house envelope until it penetrates the ceiling into the unconditioned attic space and continues on through the roof.
- I already asked my wife about removing the fireplace and using the chimney stack from it, but that was a “no-go”.
- Locating the stove in the area under the fireplace is the ideal spot for heating the basement.
(broken image removed)
I would appreciate any ideas as to the best ways to approach this. I am a bang for the buck value guy, so don’t assume an unlimited budget…

Thanks in advance.