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Anyone have a brick fireplace/chimney rebuilt?

Started by 375instroke, June 11, 2011, 11:15:17 PM

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375instroke

Mine's falling apart.  What do they cost?  I'm thinking $5,000 to $10,000.  That sound right?

Richard Cranium

Unfortunately, you're in the ball park and it'll probably be closser to 10 grand. Don't go with Vietnamese, Irish, or Mexican masons. Everyone knows that all the good masons are Italian.  :yesnod:
I am Dr. Remulac

Patronus

I know excellent masons...who are mexican. :rotz: All racism aside, you'd be best to get 3-4 quotes and go from there. And as with everything, you'll get what you pay for.  :Twocents:

Also, I've spent time in Italy. And the reason they are masons is because they never stop having to fix what they've already done.
'73 Cuda 340 5spd RMS
'69 Charger 383 "Luci"
'08 CRF 450r
'12.5 450SX FE

bakerhillpins

Are you having the entire thing torn down and rebuilt or just doing major repairs? I have a fireplace on the 2nd floor of a 3 story structure (walk out basement) with the structure inside the building envelope. It was at least 15k. Make sure they use the proper mortar.  :RantExplode: I gave the guy explicit instructions and I still ended up with Portland cement in the fire box which can't take the heat.  :brickwall: 
One great wife (Life is good)
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69 Dodge Charger R/T, Q5, C6X, V1X, V88  (Life is WAY better)
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Capt. Lyme Vol. Fire

"Inspiration is for amateurs - the rest of us just show up and get to work." -Chuck Close
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375instroke

At $10,000, I don't want the fireplace to be worth more than the rest of the house.  The bricks in the firebox are sliding inward, bricks on the very top I could remove without any tools, and the mortar is all deteriorating down to the bottom.  I feel like the entire thing is going to fall down with a gust.

bakerhillpins

Do you want to keep the fireplace? If you consider it a hazard then removing it might be the better option. You can always replace it with a gas interior unit and that way you would still have that fireplace look and feel with out the cost over reaching the property. And I live in New England where the cost of living is 2x every where else so take my cost with a grain of salt since it's going to vary a lot with where you live and how bad the economy is sucking wind.

Quote from: Patronus on June 12, 2011, 06:50:52 AM
you'd be best to get 3-4 quotes and go from there. And as with everything, you'll get what you pay for.  :Twocents:

And yea, get quotes and references. And actually check the references.  :yesnod:

One great wife (Life is good)
14 RAM 1500 5.7 Hemi Crew Cab (crap hauler)
69 Dodge Charger R/T, Q5, C6X, V1X, V88  (Life is WAY better)
96' VFR750 (Sweet)
Capt. Lyme Vol. Fire

"Inspiration is for amateurs - the rest of us just show up and get to work." -Chuck Close
"The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits." -Albert Einstein
Go that way, really fast. If something gets in your way, turn.
Science flies you to the moon, Religion flies you into buildings.

BananaDan

Have you considered an insert?  I hear good things about them, gas or wood burning, and the inserts actually put heat into your house rather than letting it all escape out the chimney.

Dan
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Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds. The mediocre mind is incapable of understanding the man who refuses to bow blindly to conventional prejudices and chooses instead to express his opinions courageously and honestly.  ~A. Einstein

Patronus

An up-to-date insert will also have a fan to blow the heated air into your house.
'73 Cuda 340 5spd RMS
'69 Charger 383 "Luci"
'08 CRF 450r
'12.5 450SX FE