Building a Hearth or Wood Storage Stand
Building a Hearth or Stand for a Wood Stove
A good hearth or stand will protect your floor from falling embers and safely reduce heat transfer from your wood stove to your floor. It can also offer space to store wood, organize your fire tools, and can highlight the wood stove as the centerpiece of your home. A properly installed and maintained wood stove can be one of the safest appliances in your home. But cheating on safety can create a very dangerous situation. In this article we will talk about:
- Floor Level Hearths
- Tall Stove Legs
- Wood Storage Stands
- Creative DIY Wood Stove Stands
Floor Level Hearth
Installing a wood stove at floor level is the most efficient way to heat your space. Because heat rises, it can be hard to warm your floor with an elevated stove, so producing the heat from lower down makes a big difference. However, a small stove at floor level will require more bending to tend the fire and won’t provide a built-in wood storage area underneath. It can also be more of a hazard to small children and pets.
Safety Requirements
When installing the Dwarf Wood Stove on a floor-level hearth with the standard 4″ legs, both ember protection and insulation are needed to reduce heat transfer to combustible materials below the stove.
- Use a non-combustible material below the stove to protect your floor from embers that may fall out when you open the stove door.
- PLUS – You’ll need to use a ½” thick layer of non-combustible insulating material below the ember protection layer. Mineral fiber or cement backer board works well.
- If using non-combustible insulating material more than ½” thick, such as brick, this can serve as both the insulation and the ember protection. Tile alone will not suffice as it is not typically over ½” thick.
- Your hearth should extend 12″ in front of the stove to catch any falling embers.
- The sides and rear of your hearth should extend to match the clearance distances required by whichever type of heat shield you are using to protect the surrounding combustibles.
Examples of Floor Level Hearths
**Disclaimer: not all photos show installations meeting the proper clearance requirements and are intended to offer materials and design inspiration only**
Dwarf Wood Stoves with Tall Legs
When installing a Dwarf Wood Stove using the tall 7″ legs, you won’t have as much heat transfer to the floor below. Because of the added distance to your floor (or other surface that the stove is mounted on), your hearth will only need ember protection and not any added insulation.
Safety Requirements
- Use at least a 24 gauge (about 0.5 mm) non-combustible material to shield combustible flooring from any embers or coals that could potentially fall from the stove.
- Ideas for ember protection include metal, glass, tile, stone, and concrete.
- Your hearth should extend 12″ in front of the stove to catch any falling embers.
- The sides and rear of your hearth should extend to match the clearance distances required by whichever type of heat shield you are using to protect the surrounding combustibles.
Examples of Dwarf Wood Stoves with Tall Legs
**Disclaimer: not all photos show installations meeting the proper clearance requirements and are intended to offer materials and design inspiration only**
Wood Storage Stands
Efficient use of space is an important consideration in any tiny space. For a clean, seamless look, the Dwarf Wood Storage stands are a great way to use space efficiently without impacting the appearance of your wood stove. These stands raise the stove about 10.5″ off the ground for easier fire tending/viewing and provides a space to store wood. As with the tall stove legs, the added distance to the floor means you won’t have as much heat transfer to the floor below. Therefore, you will only need ember protection and not any added insulation.
Safety Requirements
- Use at least 24 gauge (about 0.5 mm) non-combustible material to shield combustible flooring from any embers or coals that could potentially fall from the stove.
- Ideas for ember protection include metal, glass, tile, stone, and concrete.
- Your hearth should extend 12″ in front of the stove to catch any falling embers.
- The sides and rear of your hearth should extend to match the clearance distances required by whichever type of heat shield you are using to protect the surrounding combustibles.
Examples of Dwarf Wood Storage Stand Hearths
**Disclaimer: not all photos show installations meeting the proper clearance requirements and are intended to offer materials and design inspiration only**
Creative Stove Stands
Buying the matched wood storage stand for your Dwarf Stove isn’t the only way to elevate your stove and create a space to keep wood. Maybe you want to be able to store more wood than our stand fits or you want to match your stand to the design aesthetics in the rest of your home. Our customers have created some of the most beautiful and effective wood storage stands we’ve ever seen!
Safety Requirements
- Ember protection – Use a non-combustible material below the stove to protect your stand from embers that may fall out when you open the stove door.
- Insulation – If your stand is made of combustible material, you’ll need to ALSO use a ½” thick layer of non-combustible insulating material below the ember protection layer. Mineral fiber board works well.
- Your hearth should extend 12″ in front of the stove to catch any falling embers.
- The sides and rear of your hearth should extend to match the clearance distances required by whichever type of heat shield you are using to protect the surrounding combustibles.
Examples of Creative DIY Wood Storage Stands
**Disclaimer: not all photos show installations meeting the proper clearance requirements and are intended to offer materials and design inspiration only**
See more inspiration for creative DIY Wood Storage Stands in our Instagram Guide.
**Disclaimer: not all photos show installations meeting the proper clearance requirements and are intended to offer materials and design inspiration only**