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Home » Articles about Fire Pits, Patio Heaters, Chimineas and other Great Outdoor Living Products

Articles about Fire Pits, Patio Heaters, Chimineas and other Great Outdoor Living Products

How to Build Fire Pits

Fire pits are generally helpful in places where the nights are cool and offer a great focal point for people to gather around and create memories.  Fire pit designs use natural gas instead of wood. Fire pits can be freestanding, more portable types you can purchase or small pits dug into the ground generally built with bricks, stone, and metal including a gas line for supporting the flame. The major characteristic of a fire pit is that it has an organized way of containing the fire and preventing it from spreading. It not only gives you heat in winter, but also adds a luxurious look to your backyard. A permanently built-in fire pit can be connected to home’s natural gas line, whereas the designs that use propane are attached to a semi-portable tank and can be integrated into the structure. Like in indoor gas fireplaces, a gas fire pit creates flames above concrete or ceramic logs. If you don’t want gas the wood burning fire pits offer a very popular style and seem to keep gaining in popularity.

The entire unit of a fire pit is shaped like a bowl or a box. Fire pit designs incorporate a variety of fuel sources and are available in many different shapes and sizes. Building homemade and outdoor fire pits is really simple. Here are the things you got to do for designing them. Initially when it comes to a homemade fire pit, select the area where you want to build your pit. Ensure that the place is not near to any electronic device or socket. Once you decide the place, dig a hole for your fire pit. You can either dig a shallow pit or a deep one. The depth of a shallow fire pit can be about 1 to 2 feet from the ground, while the deeper fire pit could be about 3 feet from the ground level. Now, line the pit with fire bricks or field stones. The outer wall should be built along the perimeter of the hole in order to prevent wind from interfering with the fire. You can also decorate the outer wall of the fire pit with marble or granite. However, avoid placing these marbles and granites to the inner wall since the stones would blacken due to heat and soot from fire. No matter if you choose a wood burning fire pit or a gas fire pit, ensure that proper safety steps are taken while building them.

While building an outdoor fire pit, first measure the area on which you want to build your fire pit and then clear the area. Dig about 13 inches and remove dirt from the base. Now dig a nine inch hole to create the base of the fire pit and fill it with gravel. This helps in draining rain water. Pour some four inches of gravel in the fire pit and then add again some four inches of sand on top in order to maintain the level. You can decorate the outside area of the fire pit with fancy stones. Pour one inch mortar on decorative stones and on second layer of stones making the circle even. Add another two layers of decorative stones above it. It takes a night for the mortar to get dry.  Your permanent firepit is all set! 

Remember, if you are looking for something more portable there are hundreds of free standing fire pits available that can be moved from place to place and don’t require a hole in your yard.  You can find a complete selection of fire pits at PremiereFirePits.com.

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