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1840emmy

cement in fireplaces

1840emmy
10 years ago

Does anyone have any experience with removing cement from a fireplace? For some reason I would love to know, the prior owners of our nice old house filled in the fireplaces with cement. They are filled, as in, stuffed with cement and smoothed over, flush with the entire fireplace unit.

Clearly, they did not want them being used anymore, but why cement? And how in the world do I get it out of there without damaging something? I'm thinking we just have to get a sledgehammer and chisel and chip away at it...but would love to hear other ideas/suggestions if anyone has any. Thanks.

Comments (12)

  • mxyplx
    10 years ago

    Do you suppose someone is buried behin....naw that couldn't be.

  • maryinthefalls
    10 years ago

    I'd be tempted to get a metal decorative cover and be done with it. The POs could have found problems and the units are no longer safe to use so they sealed them up.

  • 1840emmy
    Original Author
    10 years ago

    mxypix wrote:

    "Do you suppose someone is buried behin....naw that couldn't be."

    Good Lord, that never occurred to me! I heard that a soldier died in the house during the Civil War (not sure which side but I think Union) and the neighbors have a "bullet" the PO found in the yard....but surely not what was suggested! Now I'm almost afraid to get the cement out of there, for fear of what we might find.

    But hey, they could also have stuffed a bunch of Confederate bills up the chimneys before sealing them in!

  • mxyplx
    10 years ago

    Can you lower a light and a camera on movie mode down the chimney to see the back side of the cement?

    If you do decide to dig an electric jack hammer might be a tool of choice.

    Here is a link that might be useful: Poe

  • User
    10 years ago

    It's possible that the house had chimneys that were too deteriorated to use and the fix was too expensive, so they filled them to provide a solid core and to prevent use.

    How far up does the concrete extend?

    This is probably not fixable without removing the external part of the chimney and then the concrete fill and then rebuilding the chimneys ... not a DIYand not cheap.

  • millworkman
    10 years ago

    My first thoughts were exactly as lazygardens has listed and would bet that was the reasoning behind the concrete.

  • User
    10 years ago

    I doubt the fire box is filled with concrete; the weight might cause a structural failure. It is probably just a cement stucco coating on a panel. What does it sound like when you knock on it?

  • HU-31247861
    5 years ago

    so what was the answer to cement in the fireplace and why it was done? I’ve got 5 cemented fireplaces in a house i just purchased

  • overhear
    3 years ago

    Me too!

  • res2architect
    3 years ago

    Cement is a powder mixed with fine or coarse aggregate to make mortar, concrete, stucco, etc. It can't be solid concrete so its probably a cement based stucco on a panel. Knock on it to see if its hollow and then chip it out with a hammer and cold chisel.

  • shivece
    3 years ago

    I would call a chimney sweep and ask them to check it out. They should be able to tell you about the general condition of the chimney and how far up the firebox is filled in. My guess is that closing up the firebox is based on the chimney being old enough to be suspect or otherwise in unusable condition. It may have been required by an insurance company to render it totally unusable and not a potential fire hazard to obtain a lower premium.