In June we had the chimney removed. This
consisted of 30 tons of rock and cinder block torn down and
removed; framing of a new roof line; and a new metal roof
installed over that area.
That work was all on the external side of the house. Now on to
the inside of the house.
We previous had a propane "fireplace insert". An insert, as the
name suggests, is designed to be inserted into a
fireplace opening with a chimney. So with no chimney anymore we
needed to replace that with a "propane fireplace", which uses a
much simpler exhaust system. In preparation for that, the metal
firebox for the original wood burning fireplace must be removed
due to size constraints.
Thus the plan was to have the existing inside the house wall of
stonework removed to provide access to the firebox for its
removal, then frame a new flat wall with new stonework.
And so it began ....
This is how it looked after the chimney removal. The top stones
of the wall had been removed already as part of the chimney
removal, as it was easy access to them at that point and would
have been difficult after the new roof was installed. Pink foam
insulation boards has been cut and stuffed in to place at the time
as we could see blue sky until the roof work was completed.
Blacks garage bags were stuffed in to the fireplace heating vents
to keep debris and dust from getting inside the house during
chimney demolition.

The stonework is removed, one rock at a time, using a portable
jackhammer. This generates and incredible amount of dust, so the
first step is to tent it up as much as possible. Furniture was
all covered in sheets. Pictures all removed due to vibrations.
It still made an incredible mess throughout the house -- it took
longer to clean and vacuum every inch of the house than the
demolition took -- the cathedral ceilings in particular were in a
pain in the ass to vacuum!


Inside the "tent", with the stonework removed. At this point we
can clearly see a cinder block wall around the massive firebox.
There are a few metal tabs attached to the cinder block -- these
were all that anchored the stone; a small earthquake would have
easily brought all that stone crumbling down. As our mason said
-- "We don't build like that anymore".

At this point it looks like it is simply a matter of removing the
firebox. It is big. Huge! Extra Large!
Our best guess is when they built the house they picked a spot for
the firebox, put it in place and built the house around it. Just
nuts!
The 4 tubes are the metal vents -- the design is that air is
sucked in on the lower sides of the firebox, drawn up over the
fireplace, and vented out above the fireplace.


It immediately became obvious that some of the surrounding cinder
would need to be removed to get the firebox out. The top portion
was rusted enough it just took a little muscle to yank and break
it off.
Then the torching begins.
We were definitely very, very nervous during the torching. My
role was fireman -- water bucket and garden hose turned on outside
on the deck, and fire extinguisher inside the house, but I was
outside of the tent since there was limited space.

Yikes!!

The upper portion with the vent tubes have been removed.


Various pieces inn the truck to be hauled away

When the torching was completed and it seemed the work was
complete except for cleanup, I went for a run. On my return it
looked like this photo.
The mish mash jumbles of blocks and bricks on the left side were
for the flue that extended to the basement, where we think at one
time there was a wood burning fireplace. Definitely screamed the
look of cowboy construction. The tent is removed and the area is
very clean.
This is when Sandy and I looked at it and said "Y'know, if those
blocks were removed, we could put in a cabinet. And above that we
could have a really cool shelf that recessed back into the sloped
ceiling". And that is how the feature creep began -- instead of a
simple flat replacement wall, we wanted more.
We had the contractor and tools right there for demolition, so up
went the tent again to tear out the additional cruft.

And on completion of the demolition, we end up with this cavity.
Since this was not planned in advance, we now wait for our
carpenter (who we worked with before) to free up to frame the area
for the fireplace, cabinets and shelf. The propane fireplace is
ordered and ready; the replacement stone is ordered and ready.
Since the fireplace venting is simple and straightforward it can
be done even in winter.
So we are not sure when the work will be done, but we'd like to
think the dirtiest and most disruptive portions are behind us.
