Fireplace Design - A Real Burning Issue
Mantlepiece and grate styles have altered but the basic structural elements of a
fireplace have not radically changed for hundreds of years.
The early combination of a large stone or brick opening with a chimney built over it evolved from the obvious
fact that smoke rises, rather than from a scientific understanding of how a well-designed flue system works.
Consequently early wood and later coal-burning fires were very inefficient and it was not until a certain Benjamin
Thompson (also known as Count Rumford) produced his thesis on the principles of fireplace design in 1799 that
smaller grates and improvements in the internal shape of the openings were introduced.
A brick or stone enclosure forms the basis of the fireplace. Variously known as the fireplace opening or recess
or builders opening, it may be set flush with the wall or built out into the room, forming a chimney breast. This
chimney breast rises through the height of the house, emerging through the roof to form a chimney stack. At the top
of the opening the gather and flue combine to carry the smoke up the chimney. If the chimney is shared by several
fireplaces on different floors, it may contain more than one flue.
The masonry over the fireplace opening is supported by a lintel or a brick arch. Old inglenook fireplaces used
massive oak beams, whereas a strong iron strap usually supports an early brick arch. Later fireplaces may have a
straight arch supported by angle iron, and by the twentieth century cast concrete lintels were the norm.
A hearth, constructed from non-combustible materials such as stone or tile-faced concrete, projects out into the
room to protect the floor from falling ashes. In most old houses the hearth was set flush with the floor, although
sometimes a superimposed one was used to raise the level. The space within the fireplace opening, known as the back
hearth, is usually level with the hearth itself. A dog grate for burning wood or coal can be placed on this back
hearth. However, by the mid-nineteenth century the mass produced cast-iron register grate which filled the opening,
had become the fashion.
To complete the assembly, a mantelpiece or mantel – or fireplace surround, as it is often called today – is
fitted to frame the grate or fireplace opening. The mantel may be constructed from stone, slate, marble, wood or
cast iron. The walls around it may be finished with wood paneling, or more commonly with plaster, and in some cases
the mantel extends upwards to form an impressive chimneypiece. Mirrored overmantels were introduced in the late
eighteenth century, and these became the classic feature of Victorian sitting rooms.
Within this fireplace an open fire burning wood or coal is a cheerful sight, but if it is your only source of
heat, as it was for centuries, this romantic image can soon fade especially if the fire does not burn properly.
Getting a fire started and keeping it alight then becomes a challenge, if not a chore. For wood and coal fires to
burn well a good supply of air is needed under the grate, as well as a means of escape for the hot gases and smoke.
With the fuel safely contained within the fireplace opening on a grate, free circulation of air is possible and
waste ash can fall through the grate so the fire is not stifled. If the chimney is inadequate or the flow of air is
restricted the fire will not function effectively.
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