Texas Service Experts

Premium Wood-to-Gas Conversion in Dallas-Fort Worth — Texas Service Experts

Texas Service Experts brings concierge-level wood-to-gas conversion work to Dallas-Fort Worth’s most architecturally significant homes. From Tudor Revival in Highland Park to Mid-century moderns along Strait Lane, every project we deliver in DFW starts with a CSIA-certified inspection, a designer-led concept phase, and engineered construction documents — then finishes with NFPA 211 commissioning and a written report. We work across Highland Park, University Park, Preston Hollow, Westover Hills (Fort Worth), and the broader DFW market.

DFW’s freeze-thaw cycles (annual 25-40 freeze nights) cause expansion cracks in older brick chimney crowns; expansive North Texas clay soils also rotate masonry stacks if footings weren’t engineered correctly. That’s why we engineer every wood-to-gas conversion for DFW’s specific climate, soil, and code environment — not a generic Texas template. Our crews are W-2 employees (not subcontractors), every project is built to NFPA 211 and the IRC as locally adopted, and every deliverable closes with a written commissioning report you can hand to a future buyer or appraiser.

Convert an existing wood-burning fireplace to a clean, efficient gas insert or direct-vent unit — with the option to retain the traditional masonry surround while gaining push-button operation and 70-85% efficiency.

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Free Inspection Available
Complimentary 15-minute safety assessment — no obligation, no upsell pressure.
Visual-only assessment. Not a formal CSIA Level 1, 2, or 3 inspection.

Our Wood-to-Gas Conversion Process in Dallas-Fort Worth

Every wood-to-gas conversion project in DFW follows the same seven-stage process — refined across hundreds of premium projects across the four major Texas metros. The discipline of the process is what makes the finished work last decades.

  1. Pre-Conversion Inspection. CSIA-certified technician performs Level-2 inspection of existing fireplace and flue, verifies firebox dimensions, confirms gas supply availability, and identifies any masonry repair needed before conversion.
  2. Insert Specification & Owner Selection. Based on firebox dimensions, BTU sizing for the room, and aesthetic preference, we present 2-3 direct-vent inserts with realistic log/media options. Owner selects unit and finish.
  3. Permit, Gas Line, and Venting Plan. We pull the mechanical permit, plan the gas-line route (often tapping the closest accessible line and sizing per IFGC), and design the co-axial venting routing up the existing flue.
  4. Gas Line Installation & Pressure Test. Licensed plumber runs the gas line, installs a shutoff within 6 ft of the unit, and performs a leak/pressure test (typically 15-30 minutes at 1.5x working pressure) before connecting.
  5. Liner Installation & Insert Set. Stainless co-axial liner installed top-down through the existing flue, terminated at an approved cap, and connected to the insert. Insert leveled and shimmed inside the existing firebox; existing damper permanently clamped open or removed per manufacturer instructions.
  6. Commissioning. Initial firing with manometer to verify input gas pressure (typically 7 in. WC for natural gas, 11 in. WC for LP), flame appearance, and proper combustion. Carbon monoxide spillage test at the unit face.
  7. Owner Orientation & Final Inspection. Walkthrough of remote, IPI start, ember controls, annual maintenance schedule, and warranty paperwork. Municipal inspection signed off.

Materials, Methods, and Specifications

The difference between a beautiful wood-to-gas conversion that lasts 30 years and one that fails in 5 lives in the specifications. Here is exactly what we build with on DFW projects:

  • **Gas insert options**: Direct-vent sealed-combustion units from Heat & Glo, Mendota, Valor, Regency, and Hearth & Home (DV-30, DV-36, DV-42 sizing depending on firebox).
  • **Venting**: Co-axial direct-vent (typically 4 in./6 5/8 in. or 6 in./10 in.) routed up the existing flue with stainless liner kit — pulls combustion air from outside, vents combustion products outside, sealed to room air.
  • **Gas supply**: 1/2-inch black iron or CSST gas line run from meter or manifold, sized to BTU load (per IFGC Table 402.4); shutoff valve installed within 6 ft of appliance per code.
  • **Logs & media**: Hand-painted ceramic-fiber log sets (split-oak, birch, driftwood styles) or modern glass-media beds (clear, bronze, obsidian) with optional remote ember-bed lighting.
  • **Controls**: Wall-switch, IPI (Intermittent Pilot Ignition) with full battery backup, smartphone-controlled thermostat options, and variable flame height.

Our material partners in DFW include Acme Brick (HQ Fort Worth), Blackson Brick, Texas Quarries (Cedar Park-supplied to DFW), and Stoneyard for reclaimed Lueders limestone. — relationships built over years of premium project delivery. We slab-select natural stone with homeowners at the quarry yard whenever possible and we will never substitute material without written owner approval.

DFW Permitting, Code, and HOA Considerations

Permitting authority: City of Dallas Building Inspection (Oak Cliff Municipal Center) and the Fort Worth Development Services Department. We pull every permit, schedule every inspection, and provide stamped documentation at project close.

Code basis: Dallas amends the 2021 IRC for chimney terminations and follows NFPA 211 for clearance to combustibles. Fort Worth enforces a 2-foot/10-foot rule strictly on Westside hillside lots. We build to NFPA 211 (the national standard for chimneys, fireplaces, vents, and solid-fuel-burning appliances) and to the locally adopted IRC/IMC/IFGC.

HOA and architectural review: Highland Park, University Park, Preston Hollow Estates, and most master-planned Southlake communities (Carillon, Vaquero) maintain architectural review boards that require pre-approval for chimney chase, masonry stack, and venting modifications. We prepare the ARC submittal packet — elevations, material samples, product cut sheets, and structural details — and represent the project at architectural review board meetings as needed.

DFW Market, Climate, and Engineering Notes

The DFW premium market: DFW is a 7.6-million-person MSA spanning 11 counties. The premium fireplace remodel market is concentrated in the Park Cities (Highland Park / University Park ZIPs 75205, 75225), Preston Hollow (75230), Southlake (76092), and Westover Hills (76107). North Texas housing stock includes a large inventory of 1920s-1940s Tudor and Spanish Revival homes in HP/UP, mid-century moderns along Strait Lane and Park Lane, and 1990s-present transitional new-builds in Southlake, Westlake, and Vaquero. Median home values in target ZIPs range from $1.6M to $7M+, supporting the premium spend per project we routinely deliver.

Climate and engineering considerations: DFW averages 28-40 freeze nights per year with several deep cold snaps (the Feb 2021 winter storm hit -2°F in some North Texas neighborhoods). Expansive Eagle Ford and Austin Chalk-derived clay soils across Tarrant and Dallas counties exhibit 4-8 inches of seasonal vertical movement, which rotates older masonry stacks if footings weren’t engineered to bearing. We design every chimney and outdoor fireplace foundation for these specific soil conditions with a geotechnical-informed footing.

Recent DFW Project Example

On a recent Preston Hollow remodel (1937 Tudor Revival), we rebuilt the firebox with high-alumina firebrick, installed a 6-inch 316Ti stainless liner, fabricated a hand-tooled Lueders limestone surround with French-style cast-stone overmantel, and integrated a reclaimed white-oak mantel from an East Texas barn. The project closed with a written commissioning report, a 25-year masonry warranty, and a 10-year flue-liner warranty.

Project examples like this are not exceptions for us — they are the standard scope of work we deliver across Dallas-Fort Worth every month. Every project closes with the same deliverables: a written commissioning report, a Level-2 video scan of the flue, stamped permits where required, and a comprehensive warranty package.

Warranty, Certifications, and Standards

Texas Service Experts technicians are CSIA (Chimney Safety Institute of America) certified, our installers are NFI (National Fireplace Institute) credentialed where applicable, and our gas fitters are licensed under the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation. Every wood-to-gas conversion we deliver in DFW is built to NFPA 211 (the national standard for chimneys, fireplaces, vents, and solid-fuel-burning appliances), the IRC/IMC/IFGC as adopted by the local jurisdiction, and the manufacturer’s installation instructions for any factory-built appliance.

Our standard warranty package on a premium wood-to-gas conversion in Dallas-Fort Worth includes:

  • 25-year masonry workmanship warranty on all stone and brick installations
  • 10-year warranty on stainless flue liners (typically pass-through of the manufacturer’s lifetime warranty)
  • 5-year warranty on factory-built gas inserts, direct-vent units, and outdoor gas appliances (manufacturer warranty pass-through plus our labor)
  • 2-year warranty on finishes (paint, stain, plaster)
  • Lifetime parts-and-labor support for any work product traceable to a manufacturing or workmanship defect

Why Texas Service Experts for Wood-to-Gas Conversion in Dallas-Fort Worth

Three things separate Texas Service Experts from the volume-based fireplace remodel market in DFW:

  1. W-2 employees, not subcontractors. Every technician, mason, and finish carpenter on your project is on our payroll, background-checked, and accountable to our standards. We do not subcontract the trade work that makes or breaks a premium remodel.
  2. Designer-led, not salesperson-led. Your first meeting is with a designer, not a commission salesperson. We will tell you exactly what your fireplace needs (and what it does not) — and the proposal you receive is a fixed-price proposal based on a real assessment, not a guess.
  3. Engineered, not eyeballed. Every project includes a Level-2 video scan of the flue, soil-informed footing design for outdoor work, BTU sizing for any combustion appliance, and code-compliant clearance documentation. We close with a written commissioning report you can hand to a future buyer or appraiser.
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Competitor Price Match Promise
Have a written quote from another licensed Texas chimney company? Show us — we'll do everything we can to match or beat it. We can't promise on every job (some competitors skip safety steps or quote below cost), but we'll work hard to make the numbers right for you.

Frequently Asked Questions — Wood-to-Gas Conversion in Dallas-Fort Worth

Will a gas insert really heat my room as well as wood?

A properly sized direct-vent insert at 30,000-42,000 BTU will heat 600-1,200 sq ft to 75°F+ on the coldest DFW nights, with 70-85% efficiency vs. the 10-20% efficiency of an open masonry wood fireplace. Most homeowners report the room is warmer with the insert than it ever was with wood.

Can I keep my existing brick or stone surround?

In most cases yes. Direct-vent inserts fit inside the existing firebox opening and the original surround, hearth, and mantel can stay. We measure your firebox at the assessment and confirm which insert sizes will fit.

How much does a wood-to-gas conversion cost in Dallas-Fort Worth?

A complete conversion — direct-vent insert, stainless co-axial liner, gas line run, log set or media bed, remote, and commissioning — typically runs $7,500 to $18,500 in DFW depending on insert selection, gas-line distance, and any masonry repair required.

Do I need a new gas line to my fireplace?

Usually yes, unless a properly sized line already terminates at the firebox. We run 1/2-inch black iron or CSST from the nearest accessible point, sized per IFGC Table 402.4 to the BTU load, with a shutoff valve within 6 ft of the appliance.

What’s the difference between vented gas logs and a direct-vent insert?

Vented gas logs sit in your existing open firebox with the damper locked open — they look beautiful but most of the heat escapes up the flue (15-25% efficiency). A direct-vent insert is a sealed-combustion appliance that pulls combustion air from outside, vents combustion products outside, and delivers 70-85% efficiency.

Will the gas conversion meet DFW code?

Dallas amends the 2021 IRC for chimney terminations and follows NFPA 211 for clearance to combustibles. Fort Worth enforces a 2-foot/10-foot rule strictly on Westside hillside lots. Our installers are licensed plumbers and gas fitters; we pull the mechanical permit, perform the required pressure test (typically 15-30 minutes at 1.5x working pressure), and call for municipal inspection before commissioning.

How often does a gas insert need service?

Annual service is recommended — burner cleaning, log/media inspection, glass cleaning, gasket inspection, pilot/IPI check, and gas-pressure verification. We offer a service plan that includes annual maintenance and priority response.

Schedule a Wood-to-Gas Conversion Consultation in Dallas-Fort Worth

Texas Service Experts is the premium wood-to-gas conversion specialist for Dallas-Fort Worth. Every consultation begins with a CSIA-certified on-site assessment and a designer-led discussion — no high-pressure sales, no template proposals. We will tell you exactly what your fireplace needs (and what it does not), provide a fixed-price proposal, and stand behind the work for the life of the installation.

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Safe Warmth Starts with a Clean Chimney.