The Family Handyman

WARMTH WHERE YOU WANT IT

AN ELECTRIC FIREPLACE CAN ENHANCE ANY CHILLY SPACE

- BY MIKE BERNER

A built-in electric fireplace can make any room cozy— even your bathroom.

Stepping out of a warm tub or shower into a cold space is one of life’s lesser joys. Besides just tolerating the chill, the usual remedy has been to install a heat lamp. But with their red glow and noisy timers, they can make you feel like a newborn chick or maybe a hot dog waiting all afternoon for a hungry customer at a gas station. I wanted a completely different vibe—no surprise—for our bathroom revival. With this electric fireplace, I can change the color of the flames and embers, and I can control the heat output, all using Wi-Fi.

EASY INSTALLATI­ON, ANYWHERE.

To ease this installati­on, I built out an existing wall. Doing this makes it possible to put an electric fireplace anywhere in your home without worrying about compromisi­ng a load-bearing wall or the insulation on an exterior wall. It simplifies pulling wires too, but you’ll have to apply drywall, tape and mud.

1 MAP IT OUT

To position the fireplace with the required clearance, I started with a cardboard cutout of the fireplace. For this bathroom remodel, we’re adding a raised deck for a tub (see p. 34), so I marked the finished height of the tub deck, the height of the tub and 6 in. of clearance above the tub to the bottom edge of the fireplace. I centered and leveled the cutout, and then taped it to the wall.

2 MARK THE PLATES

For the top and bottom plates of your fireplace wall, cut two 2x6s 1 in. shorter than the finished wall. Flush their ends and use a Speed Square to mark across both plates, marking the center, the fireplace rough opening and the studs every 16 in. on-center. The rough opening should be 1-1/2 in. taller and wider than the fireplace; this will give you enough space to drywall the opening, as well as some wiggle room.

3 BUILD THE WALL

After you cut the studs, separate the top and bottom plates, and lay the studs in between. While you line up the studs on your layout marks, check them for a crown and, if there is one, face it up. For this small wall, I fastened the studs with screws through the plates, positioned the sill to the rough opening size and then capped the wall with a second top plate.

4 SECURE TO STUDS WITH BLOCKS

To fasten the new wall in place, attach blocks between the studs, flush with the back of the wall.

Then locate studs in the existing wall and drive screws through the blocks into the studs. If the existing studs line up with the new wall’s stud layout, toe-screw the top of the wall into the existing studs.

5 FISH THE CABLE

Building out a wall makes running cable as easy as drilling a hole and pulling the cable through. Read the owner’s manual for your electric fireplace. Ours says, “Never overload the circuit” and, “Avoid plugging other appliances into the same circuit as this fireplace.” This told me it should probably be on its own circuit for safety. If there isn’t a dedicated circuit already in place, hire an electricia­n to install one.

6 FINISH THE WALL

With the electrical cable run through the opening, I covered the wall with drywall, taped and mudded. The inside of the opening where the wood framing is exposed should also be covered with drywall to maintain the recommende­d clearance to combustibl­es.

7 OPTIONS FOR POWER

This fireplace has two options for power: You can either plug it into an outlet with the cord that’s attached, or remove the cord and hardwire it to a dedicated circuit. To plug it in, I would have needed to add an outlet, so I opted to hardwire it. I simply opened the cover and swapped the cord with the cable I fished through the opening.

8 FIT AND FASTEN THE FIREPLACE

Remove the glass panel and the side brackets inside to expose the holes for fastening the fireplace. I used the matching black 1-1/2-in. wood screws that came with the kit and drove them while pressing the fireplace tight to the wall. Once both sides were fastened, I replaced the side brackets.

9 ADD THE EMBERS & LOGS

I added the crystal embers to the fireplace tray and set the driftwood log pieces on top. The LED strip below the embers makes the crystals glow in different colors.

10 REPLACE THE GLASS PANEL

After cleaning the fireplace screen and the back of the glass, I carefully set the glass panel in place and fastened it into position with two setscrews. When the circuit breaker is flipped on and our wall is painted, this bathroom will be a warm and cozy retreat.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? BOTTOM PLATE
LEAVE ROOM FOR DRYWALL
CROWN
OPENING SILL
TOP PLATE
SECOND TOP PLATE 3
BOTTOM PLATE LEAVE ROOM FOR DRYWALL CROWN OPENING SILL TOP PLATE SECOND TOP PLATE 3
 ??  ?? CENTER OF THE WALL
TUB HEIGHT
TUB DECK HEIGHT 1
CENTER OF THE WALL TUB HEIGHT TUB DECK HEIGHT 1
 ??  ?? 1" SHORTER THAN THE WALL
MARK THE STUDS BELOW THE OPENING 2
1" SHORTER THAN THE WALL MARK THE STUDS BELOW THE OPENING 2
 ??  ?? BLOCKING
STUDS MARKED 4
BLOCKING STUDS MARKED 4
 ??  ?? DRYWALL INSIDE THE OPENING 6
DRYWALL INSIDE THE OPENING 6
 ??  ?? 5
5
 ??  ?? SETSCREWS
GLASS PANEL 10
SETSCREWS GLASS PANEL 10
 ??  ?? SIDE BRACKET
FIREPLACE TRAY 8
SIDE BRACKET FIREPLACE TRAY 8
 ??  ?? DRIFTWOOD PIECES
CRYSTAL EMBERS 9
DRIFTWOOD PIECES CRYSTAL EMBERS 9
 ??  ?? 7
7

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