Indoor Gas Fireplace Safety for Beginners

If you’re new to the world of fireplaces, it’s likely yours will be a gas-burning model. And for that, you’re lucky. A rustic, wood-burning fireplace can be a delight in a northwoods cabin, but in your home, gas-burning is the safer option. Plus, there’s no reason to be intimidated by a gas fireplace.
Read on for some background and safety tips that will help you enjoy your fireplace for years to come.
Three Reasons for a Gas Fireplace
Wood-burning fireplaces can be beautiful, but for most people they aren’t practical. Here’s why.
Local laws
“One reason people go with gas-burning fireplaces is they are mandated by local communities,” says Rosie Romero, a Phoenix-based remodeling contractor and owner and president of Rosie On The House, a popular weekend radio show in Arizona.
“In Phoenix, we are in a valley, and in winter there is a temperature inversion that puts an ‘umbrella’ over the valley,” Romero says. “So any emission coming out of a fireplace, automobile or industry is trapped and becomes a huge black cloud over the city.
“About 20 years ago, Phoenix mandated no-burn days when you could not burn a real wood fire, to reduce emissions. Well, people here got innovative in developing real-looking gas logs, and they just took off.”
Convenience
All it takes is walking over to the fireplace and flipping a switch. That’s it.
“Few people in an urban setting use fire for natural heat,” Romero says. “They use fire for the ambiance of the flame.
“Gas logs accomplish what most people are looking for with one one-hundredth the effort of a wood-burning fireplace — and with zero maintenance. You never have to scoop ashes, and you don’t have a backdraft of ashes blowing through the house. In the urban setting, gas logs are now the predominant choice.”
Cost
Romero says a cord of hardwood, delivered and stacked in Phoenix, is about $400, while a nice gas-log set ranges from $1,500 to $2,000 installed.
“Do I want to go with a $400 cord of wood time and time again that needs to be split and started and fed into the fire constantly?” Romero says. “Or do I want the one-time cost and the convenience of turning a switch and the flame is on?” The answer is obvious.
Gas Fireplace Safety Tips
Don’t let the convenience make you complacent about gas fireplace safety, however. After all, there’s propane or natural gas entering your house and feeding a fire in your living space.
Just because you’re burning gas and not logs doesn’t mean the fire is fake. There’s still a flame. You run the risk excess carbon monoxide will poison your family, or an untended gas flame will cause a fire.
Here are Romero’s 10 tips for indoor gas-burning fireplace safety:
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