Home of the San Francisco Chronicle

Subscribe to the weekend Chronicle

powered by
Ideabooks
Photos
Products
Ideabooks
Discussions
Professionals
Users
Under the hearth. The spot underneath a raised hearth often goes unused. Make the most of it by creating a spot for wood storage underneath.

Design tip: When designing for storage under the hearth, keep in mind that a raised hearth is made to sit on. Try not to extend the height of the wood storage past 18 inches, which is the standard sitting height.
by Crisp Architects  
To the ceiling. Take your wood storage all the way to the ceiling for a dramatic design. Even a narrow design like this can provide a lot of storage when it extends this high. This is great for those who plan to really put their fireplace to use.

Design tip: Make sure your design is practical. Something like this means you have to think about how you will take out the wood at the top — you might need a great step stool to help you out.
Modern Dining Room  
Hidden on the side. This firewood storage is hard to see from most spots in this living room. A tucked-away spot like this is a great way to camouflage storage that can get pretty messy at times.

Design tip: A custom storage unit can be a great way to accommodate longer pieces of wood for extra-large fireplaces. Design your firewood alcove with a longer depth to make sure everything fits.
by Capoferro Design Build Group  
Flanking the fireplace. Here's a great example of simple, symmetrical design. Flank each side of your fireplace with storage for maximum visual effect and more space for logs.

Design tip: When your firebox storage compartments are visible at eye level, keep in mind that they will need to be look great even when there's no wood inside. Placing a durable material on the back will make sure that marks and scratches from the wood won't affect the overall look.
by d'apostrophe design, inc.
Retrofit furniture. If you have a freestanding fireplace and nowhere to house your wood, consider retrofitting a piece of furniture. This bookshelf became a creative way to store wood in this home.

Design tip: Most bookcases are only 12 inches deep, so have your wood cut to that length or shorter for a snug and tidy fit.
by kimberly peck architect  
Around the back. Take the focus off the wood storage entirely by building in an alcove around the back of the fireplace. Here a simple wing wall stores the logs.

Design tip: Drywall is very susceptible to damage. Use care when placing your wood inside an alcove like this.
by Interior Issues Interieurarchitect Rotterdam
As artwork. Create a framed opening above your fireplace for wood storage, like in this gorgeous home. Instantly all of your wood becomes art — until you need to fuel the fire, of course.

Design tip: Consider the height of such an artful creation. Like with the ceiling-high installation, you may need to keep a step stool handy to get wood down.
by Jessica Helgerson Interior Design  
Easy access. Here a hinged access panel inside a cubby allows firewood to be moved from a larger wood pile (most likely in the garage) directly to the fireplace — no venturing out into the snow to lug in firewood.

Design tip: During the design phase, make sure that the door of the access panel swings into the room behind the fireplace and not into the cubby. If the door is in the way, you won't be able to close it once you have all the wood you need.

More:
See stylish wood storage for contemporary and traditional homes


Clean-Burning Woodstoves Ignite a Greener Heating Trend
by Bill Fry Construction - Wm. H. Fry Const. Co.

Comments

Rough Linen I keep firewood in two big West Point metal trunks flanking my woodstove, with one big basket of my 'best' wood, and one of vine trimmings either side too. Neat and easy.
3 months ago · ·
tsudhonimh Vermin housing! Bark scorpions, cockroaches, field mice, lizards ants, black widow spiders, wasps, wolf spiders ....

Unless you examine every piece of wood as you bring it in for all the pests that hide and hibernate in woodpiles, this is a great way to enliven your evenings when the critters come out.
3 months ago · ·
rosiew tsudhonimh is dead on right about the colossal number of insects, especially, that can be making a home in your firewood. Conventional wisdom, at least in the South, is to bring into the house only what will be burned that evening.

As great looking as many of these storage options are, don't do it if you're in the South.
3 months ago · ·
UCARCHITECT Do keep in mind standard firewood is cut to 16" and a "face chord" is 8' long, 4' high. Keep the wood inside for a bit to dry to reduce the amount of soot that will accumulate in the chimney.
3 months ago · ·
noreaster88 I love, love the look of these rooms, but it wouldn't work here in Maine, either. Firewood often has a ton of mold spores and it can really aggravate allergies. Not to mention the insect hitchhikers, even here, although my cats do enjoy an arachnid play-toy.

Maybe if it was de-barked and dried out for several months inside and treated like home decor instead of burning it?
3 months ago · ·
Amy J. Greving - Art Studio LLC As an artist who works in concrete and built this fireplace for our new home, we're loving the fact we can store plenty of wood for many fires before refilling. Please note it's only half full due to the fact we had a winter storm last night.
3 months ago · ·
vee22 Obviously those people aren't serious wood burners. We here in Maine are laughing at those pictures. lol
3 months ago · ·
ljfq Anyone who uses wood heat as anything more than an occasional aesthetic is laughing right along with Maine. It might take more hours to fit the firewood into these lovely cubbyholes than it would take to burn it. They are beautiful to look at, though!
For Houzz users contemplating new construction, the trap door like Photo #7 (from a mudroom, porch, garage, etc.) is the way to go. We put ours high enough in the wall to just drop the wood into a sturdily constructed woodbox that matches the hearth material.
3 months ago · ·
dalisckova wonderful ideas
3 months ago ·
jimmianne I loe the way these places look, but I would never store firewood in the house - all those lovely black widows & other iffy bugs hatching right there in the living room. The other thing is - all the wood looks so uniform and clean. It's bad enough to store a day's worth next to the stove, but can't imagine storing it overhead. still, it's a great look. clean wood for looks and real wood outside the back door. perfect!
3 months ago · ·
Morgan Spenla Love all of these ideas. We just made a faux stacked wood facade for our currently-not-working fireplace that fits along this theme! http://www.pepperdesignblog.com/2013/02/27/pinterest-challenge-faux-log-stack-fireplace-facade/
3 months ago · ·
rosebud3 My main heating source is a wood stove. Most of these ideas shown are "pretty," but "pretty" impractical for the way I go through wood in an evening. I'd be spending my evening stacking wood to look like art and miss the enjoyment and warmth of my fire.
3 months ago · ·
Kate C I agree with Rosie and Tsudhonimh - bringing firewood you plan to use (rather than sanitized wood that is for the "look" / decorations) is not a good idea. Even if you look wood over before bringing it in as the wood warms up (to house temp, or because it is right next to the fire) everything living inside will crawl out. Besides the ick factor of having bugs in the house - it is also not wise to store your wood pile directly adjacent to the house outside. Termites will easily travel from the wood pile to your home doing unbelievable damage and, wood piles are also nice homes for all sorts of rodents you wouldn't want to have proximity to the house. It is a little bit of a pain to walk out into the yard for firewood, but is well worth given the considerations.
3 months ago · ·
Lou Ann Martin The comments here are all very practical re: bug, mold etc... However, whenever you have a woodburning fireplace or stove it's messy. I live in Oregon where we need a fire to just ward off the damp cold from all the rain. If I had my way I wouldn't have one at all. Our wood is stored on our back deck. Just carrying it in drags in dirt. We have no carpet in the house because of this dirt not to mention the fan on the fireplace blows this dirt all over. It look nice and cozy but it is a very drity form of heat. We even have a air filter on our heat pump and it doesn't help. I'll take my outdoor fireplace over the one inside anyday. That said, I have a big wicker truck that I put the wood in. It's lined with plastic and spread with an insect killer.
3 months ago · ·
cjpines I agree with everyone here. We have a large hearth and we stack wood next to the wood stove, but I'm trying to get something more pleasing to look at, but since you all mentioned bugs in the wood I think we will just carry in what we need. I did find beetles.
3 months ago · ·
nasafemme We use our woodburner non-stop from November to March and since we have a flush slate hearth, we just pile what we need for each day neatly on the hearth. We hate schlepping all that wood (piled about 50 feet away from the house) but we love our low electric bills.
2 months ago · ·
Dixie Henrie It's not just in the South that bugs are in firewood. It's everywhere. The only difference is the type of bug. I would never invite the spiders inside with firewood.
2 months ago · ·
Sara Parker In the Bahamas, we can apply these ideas mainly to outdoor fireplaces, which more and more people are adding to outdoor rooms.
2 months ago ·
rosebud3 Nasafemme, I am like you. I use my woodstove exclusively for heat from October through March and sometimes a day or two through May. We do have an occasional heavy wet snowstorm as late as May. I quit using my forced hot air heat (fueled by propane) the winter it started costing me $300/mo and I was still not warm. Now I spend about $300 for 6 months of propane for cooking, hot water, and clothes dryer. I use about $150/mo for wood in the coldest months, but generally more like $80/mo for wood, and am toasty warm. For me, nothing warms a house like a great wood stove. I do use a portable electric heater to warm the bathroom for my shower because the bathroom doesn't really get warm enough from the fire. The bedrooms are very comfortable for sleeping, not too warm, not cold, just cool for sleeping.
2 months ago · ·
rosebud3 Also meant to say when we had the house built we had a space sectioned off in the garage that would fit a stacked cord of wood. I never have to go outside for wood, just into the garage. Being in the mountains in New Mexico, I don't have a bug problem. I live peaceably with the tiny forest spiders. I tell them as long as they stay out of the bedroom they can live, but in the bedroom they are fair game for the flyswatter, especially if on the ceiling over the bed or the wall behind the head of the bed.
2 months ago ·
jimmianne that first photo didn't show how much light I've gained.
8 weeks ago ·
Sign Up to comment
People found the photos in this ideabook after searching for:
The content on this page is provided by Houzz and is subject to the Houzz terms of use, copyright and privacy policy.
Copyright claims: contact the Houzz designated agent.