Hi everyone,
I am considering trying to buy a house that has a very old stone fireplace and chimney. The structure might be original to the late-19th century log cabin build that makes up the core of the house, but I'm not sure - seems pretty likely, actually. I already know it would need a lot of attention to get it into anything like useable condition: an inspection report came back with the information that it's entirely unlined, is cracking, isn't capped, is generally a mess and would need to be further evaluated to know the extent of the work involved. All of that feels like a lot of work for a fireplace and I wonder if it would be possible and maybe even advisable to abandon the fireplace for fires and instead use it for a wood burning stove (not an insert - a little free-standing stove) and run the pipe (possibly double walled?) up the chimney. Clearly I'd still have to stabilize the chimney itself (if it falls down, it does no good for anything), but what I wonder is if this is a viable thing to consider, if it would be a solution to consider instead of probably needing to start from scratch with the fireplace and chimney, or if it's not a possible consideration at all and to make it work would involve just as much, if not more, work to make the combination safe and functional.
Thoughts very much appreciated, thanks!
-c
I am considering trying to buy a house that has a very old stone fireplace and chimney. The structure might be original to the late-19th century log cabin build that makes up the core of the house, but I'm not sure - seems pretty likely, actually. I already know it would need a lot of attention to get it into anything like useable condition: an inspection report came back with the information that it's entirely unlined, is cracking, isn't capped, is generally a mess and would need to be further evaluated to know the extent of the work involved. All of that feels like a lot of work for a fireplace and I wonder if it would be possible and maybe even advisable to abandon the fireplace for fires and instead use it for a wood burning stove (not an insert - a little free-standing stove) and run the pipe (possibly double walled?) up the chimney. Clearly I'd still have to stabilize the chimney itself (if it falls down, it does no good for anything), but what I wonder is if this is a viable thing to consider, if it would be a solution to consider instead of probably needing to start from scratch with the fireplace and chimney, or if it's not a possible consideration at all and to make it work would involve just as much, if not more, work to make the combination safe and functional.
Thoughts very much appreciated, thanks!
-c