Need help with PLAIN fireplace ....
We have an fireplace that needs a LOT of love ... right now it's just plain brick, no mantel and there's a brick step in front of it that is an accident waiting to happen with our little kids. The look we like is clean/modern and we would like to mount our TV above the fireplace. Any ideas? I'm also attaching an inspiration photo. NOTE: On the opposite side of the wall is another fireplace - we are unable to remove any of the brick - we'll have to build over it).
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The kid safe thing is something else. The brick step you referred to is a raised hearth and yes they can result in stitches over eyes or on forehead quite easily with little one. If you do go with a built-in, you could extend the new unit at the end of the new mantel closing off the open end of the hearth thereby creating a barrier that would force your little ones to swing wide and covering up the corner.
Another option would be as has been noted, using bumpers or something to pad the hearth edge. A friend with little ones, used a couple of those foam tube pool floats that she cut a quarter section piece out of and used Velcro to attach them. She even covered them with the same fabric she used on her wing back chairs to tie them into the overall scheme............when the little ones got past that danger stage she removed the Velcro tabs and it was back to normal.....
I like your fireplace, it's a clean palette to work with and has loads of potential.
Is it a wood fireplace or gas???? If it is wood I would convert it to gas.
I know it is scary to have this configuaration when your kids are small...but they will be grown before you know it and that looks like a great fireplace to sing songs and roast marshmellows by!
I would like to see more of the room to really come up with a solution for you.
In the photo, it appears as though the room, or at least that corner is not really on a true square. I am getting that by the way the hearth by the right hand door is cut and the way the left side of the fireplace wall looks as though it goes somewhat sharply to the right. It could be the angle of the photo.
My One suggestion would be is that you would not be able to build anything deeper than about the 8 to 10 inches or so that appears to be all you have available on the far right side by the door. That would bring you to the rounded grey edge. Going from that, you could build almost any type or style of built in's that you would like, whether it be shelving units, cupboards, or a combination of both. (Don't forget about the firewood box, if you made/make one).
Personally, the only thing I would do around the fireplace (and the possible firewood box) would be a mantle piece. Many times you can find very nice ones at a salvage yard and refinish it yourself and save a lot of money. Or you can do something as simple as putting up a reclaimed piece of lumber above the fireplace. You can then mount your flat screen TV above that. I do not see that there would be any discomfort having it there because the fireplace is not really that high to begin with. Furthermore, If you use a swivel mount for the TV, you can position it any way you like for you comfort.
I do not know what is to the left of the fireplace wall, but I can see that there is a bi-fold door there with possibly 6 to 8 inches available along that wall. IF there is, I would build another built-in, to match the one to the right of the fireplace. However, starting at the "sharp" square corner of the hearth, I would make it a rounded corner built-in unit. You may possibly be able to use any left over bricks to build up the rounded hearth to meet the new built-in, if you so choose.
I am working on a drawing which I hope to add to this soon, or at least submit in addition to this post. Best of luck with however you do your fireplace wall.
Our contractor has also advised us as well not to put the flat screen television over the fireplace hearth unless we have a mantel o rthe television is at least 12-24" above the hearth. We did not find this an issue as we do not have a roaring fire going every day.
But I do love the inspiration photo. Good luck with it all.
As I study the photos of your fireplace and your inspiration photo, I have a few questions. Do you want the actual components in the inspiration photo or just the overall effect? If you cannot remove any brick, in order to have a woodbox, it would have to be built out over the hearth. Is there enough depth there to accommodate one? (It's hard to tell from the photo.) The hearth becomes narrower at the end behind your door, so anything you build out to the edge of the hearth would have to follow this line, unless you don't build out to the very edge of the hearth but, again, you may not have the depth for a woodbox. The inspiration photo is a very long wall so that it doesn't look crowded with cabinets, fireplace and wood storage, your wall is shorter so you may want to simplify.
Building out a wood storage area and cabinets will give you a slightly different effect than the inspiration photo because your fireplace will be set back from the face. (It almost looks like the fireplace in the inspiration photo was built out deeper?)
If it is more the effect you are after, an idea would be to paint the brick a lighter shade of your wall color and add a hefty white ledge down the whole length of the wall as a mantel. Hang your TV above that (will getting power to it be an issue?). Find a wood storage unit with the modern lines you like and place it on the hearth to the right, perhaps a basket like West Elm sells & a matching basket for fireplace tools? Decorating your ledge keeping balance with the tv on one side may be a challenge, but overall you will have a clean, simple, modern look, with minimal expense and work. Maybe a family photo gallery, pottery with twigs & branches, etc?
It would probably be used more often with one of the latest gas/alternative/safe flames. I never wanted a fireplace; who needs the extra mess to clean up, and you know who was likely to do it! New technologies have provided many alternatives, and you will enjoy your fireplace more with one of them.
The addition of a wood mantel across the length would work. Houzz has several photos of just this configuration. It always looks sleek and sophisicated with the appropriate accessories.
Are you prepared to re-do or patch the flooring if the hearth is removed?
JW
You've got a lot of options.
An asymetrical fireplace is a very modern touch I think I would embrace it.
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Given you would like a contemporary look the first step is to rough up the bricks surface with a heavy grit sand paper, then using white Thin set either premixed or bagged and plaster the brick smooth. (adding a little chopped fiberglass in the 1st coat in the mix will reduce cracking.) I like the last suggestion about the soapstone since it can be worked with standard wood working tools, for around the firebox. I would size the soapstone so that it will = the size of the large screen tv. ( I'd mount the TV to the right of the fireplace soap stone so the the the TV is no lower than the top of the soapstone firebox trim. The margin on the left side of the firebox trim and on the right side of the TV should be equal. (The TV should have a wall mount that allows you to angle it not just lye flat.) On the curb I would build two or three custom seat cushions that over hang the bench. (use can use plywood base with two holes near the back edge of each to set on a couple of masonry nails set in to catch the holes and hold the cushions in place.) The one in front of the fireplace just gets removed when you are using it.
In the picture, the orange would be built-on that would mimic the blue but it would face out to the left. The mantle would wrap around and connect both the orange and the blue. It would be a great spot for extra serving dishes or what nots. You can even build a folddown table top behind some doors so when you have a lot of guests, you can open the doors, pop up the table top for serving table and the top would rest on the door tops when you slightly angle the doors closed. (The table top would install above the doors with hinge cuts so that it collapses down and into the doors to hide.
The blue cabinet is for you to design, everyones taste is different. But the area thats shaded, since its an awkward angle and to gain most of the other area, you should leave skinny and angled for outdoor supplies to the door next to it....ie mittens/hats at the top, maybe put a bootmat inside the bottom of the cabinet with either shelves in between for other supplies or a small coatrack. I would also make any doors the lucite which is sleek and comes in varying of colors and they slide, open or lift up - depending on which you like. [Like these doors: http://www.ikea.com/us/en/catalog/products/S89894237]
[The color block image is "top view"]
To achieve a contemporary look I suggest getting rid of the existing hearth.
Here are three fireplaces I bult in three different remodels. They would all work well with your firebox, and can be made easily for a very reasonable budget. In one of these projects the hearth is floating, in the other two we just installed the stone flush with the floor. Eliminating the hearth saves a lot of space. Good Luck!
Re your inspiration photo: We heat with wood all winter long. Those contemporary wood boxes built into the wall always crack me up. Wood is dirty, messy, irregular in size, etc. It will NEVER look like the photo unless 1.) you fill it once and then don't touch it all season or 2.) you have a very patient somewhat OCD person in the household to replenish it all the time, carefully, piece by piece, and then drag out the vacuum cleaner when they are done. Seems to me that would discourage you from using it after awhile. Even a modest free-standing wood box of some sort would be more user friendly, IMO, so you can bring in a bundle and just drop it in. It depends on how much wood you go through where you live.
I had a similar problem as far as the look a few years ago, and here's what I ended up doing. We removed the raised hearth, covered the brick with sheetrock and built a wainscot and mantel surround. Utilizing remnants of granite from our kitchen counter tops, we put a granite finish on the top of the mantel, and below forming a hearth to catch any embers that may pop out of the fireplace. I then made the fireplace a focal point using a dark green to contrast the latte walls and the brilliant white of the mantel and wainscot.
Repaint the interior of the fireplace black. If you want to make it look longer and narrower, do it visually with fireplace framing that is wider on the sides and half that size on the top (2 to 1 ratio works), it would probably work best with a black frame. I have also found that with a gas fireplace, the fireplace stones, instead of logs, looks very contemporary.
http://www.houzz.com/discussions/221391/I-need-help-with-my-awkward-livingroom