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4 Fireplace Designs to Ring in the Cool Fall Weather With

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From wood-fired to gas-fuelled, we’re suckers for a warm, cozy fireplace design

Strong opinions about residential architecture abound, but we’ve yet to meet anyone that doesn’t enjoy the warmth and ambience provided by good fireplace design. On days when the mercury plummets below zero and the snow falls sideways, there are few better greetings than the staccato crackling of a roaring fire – or, alternatively, the stolid presence of a well-fed cast iron stove or the quiet, mellow burn of a gas fireplace. With a welcoming home in mind, below you’ll find a handful of our favourite hearths to help inspire your own.

Fireplace design ideas

Photo by Doublespace Photography

Feeling Blue

There’s no reason why good fireplace design should be up against a wall. Designers Julia Jamrozik and Coryn Kempster situated their cottage’s socle in the middle of the open-concept space, where it serves as a partition, seating and daybed. The teal-glazed bricks absorb and retain heat given off by the Stûv stove, too, slowly releasing latent heat well after the fire’s been put out. See the build here.

Fireplace design ideas

Photo by Naomi Finlay

Middle Ground

Is a fireplace-adjacent bathtub conventional? No, but who wants to stick to convention, anyway? This third-floor suite, designed by Areacode‘s Darcie Watson, incorporates a fireplace into a marble-clad partition whose sheer height accentuates the unique geometry of the space while also concealing a support column. See the space here.

Fire feature design

Less is More

Previously part of a light-starved Edwardian, this fireplace, part of a colourful build by Asquith Architecture and Julie Reinhardt Design, stands out for its comparatively minimalist presence and clean lines. Not without personality, though, the plum purple treatment matches accents in the home’s original stained glass windows. Plus, it fits right into its bright, multi-hued palette. See the home here.

Central focus architecture

First Impression

If a fireplace is going to be one of the first things you see, it’s wise to make the aesthetic memorable. Case in point, this elegant treatment by Nicholas Hamilton Holmes. Recalling his Black Arts collection, which is expressed through a “tubular” design language, this treatment likewise sees painstakingly turned ebonized oak crafted into a classic form that nevertheless feels unique. See the treatment here.

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The industrial designer’s studio is running at full steam. Thankfully – and despite the pandemic – it hasn’t taken over her home, too

In hindsight, designer Mary Ratcliffe has managed to ride out the lockdown better than most. With her own production space, she was able to continue going to work, albeit without the rest of the team that makes up her eponymous studio. So in the scary – well, scarier – early days of the pandemic, Ratcliffe maintained a semblance of working normalcy, revamping her website, reaching out to old contacts and even getting a new line of objects underway, which has become a welcome adjunct to the spaces (like this small-space gem) and furniture her studio designs. Months later, things are challenging for another reason: with new orders, new products and two more staffers, business is booming.

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