Building a Faux Marble
Fireplace
Overview: A marble fireplace
can be an expensive addition or add on in home
construction. The typical marble fireplace can cost
well over $10k to build, depending on the design of
the mantel and surround. If the marble is imported
the price can even be higher. Having said that,
marble fireplaces offer unusual exquisite beauty
and uniqueness that cannot be duplicated by brick
or stone fireplaces.
You can capture the beauty and uniqueness of a
marble fireplace without going through the expense
by building a faux marble fireplace. Here is how I
did it.
A couple of decades ago I lived in France as a
Boeing Company field service engineer working with
the French Air Force. It was a great experience
with many fond memories. One of the things I do
while visiting a new town or country is read the
classified ads in the local newspaper. A wealth of
information can be obtained from reading classified
ads such as a general feeling of the local economy
in addition to reviewing what people may be
selling.
During one of these readings I stumbled across an
item for sale that interested me. It was an antique
“chimney” (fireplace in French). I wasn’t quite
sure just what this was so I call for an
appointment to look at the “chimney”.
To my amazement the “chimney” was a two hundred
year old marble fireplace mantel and surround
stacked in pieces in the basement of an old French
house. It was in good condition and all the pieces
to assemble it seemed to be there. I purchased it
for under $200, having no idea what I was going to
do with it.
When I left France I had it crated and placed in
storage. Some fifteen years later I built a new
house and contemplated using it in some way. I
didn’t want a conventional wood burning fireplace
where I could have used the marble mantel and
surround as the finish. Eventually I came up with a
plan the works well, actually quite fantastically.
I assembled the two hundred year old marble mantel
and surround in the den of my new home and
installed a 8,000 BTU hot water heater inside the
opening. The water heater is hooked up to the hot
water boiler with its own wall mounted thermostat
and a two stage fan. I had a fireplace screen
manufactured that fits inside the opening. It looks
just like a classic marble fireplace and it heats
the room very quickly.
Marble fireplaces are often removed from old homes
and discarded. They were designed to burn coal, not
wood. Cold burning fireplaces went out of vogue
many decades ago. Finding one and reconstructing it
in your home is a great project for the DIY
homeowner. Assembling is quite easy using marble
cement which can be purchased from most home
improvement supply center.
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