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High-End Wood-to-Gas Conversion in Lakewood | Texas Service Experts

Texas Service Experts β€” DFW chimney & fireplace specialists. Free inspection, written quote, no surprise fees.

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High-End Wood-to-Gas Conversion in Lakewood

Lakewood is a neighborhood whose architectural language was set in 1920s through 1940s, and the Tudor, Spanish Eclectic, and storybook colonial houses that define the White Rock Lake corridor and Lakewood Country Club were drawn at a time when the fireplace was understood as the structural and ceremonial center of the principal room. High-End wood-to-gas conversion work in this context is a discipline of restraint β€” the goal is never to introduce an alien architectural idiom but to make the hearth read as it would have read had the original architect been working with the materials, the codes, and the design intelligence available today.

Our high-end-tier practice serves homeowners executing a thoughtful renovation with a clear view to long-term resale β€” buyers who want investment-grade materials, contractor-grade documentation, and finished work that will photograph well, appraise well, and hold its value through a future sale. In Lakewood, that means working principally in Tudor and Spanish Eclectic idioms, drawing every surround and mantel against measured site drawings, and fabricating in materials β€” hand-troweled plaster and reclaimed terra cotta chief among them β€” that the original architecture would have specified.

To speak with our design team about a wood-to-gas conversion project, please call ☎ 214-444-8094 or schedule a consultation through our website.

What High-End Means in the Lakewood Context

The word “high-end” is used loosely in this market, and we use it specifically. In our practice, High-End tier work is defined by three operating principles, each of which can be observed in the documentation and execution of every engagement we accept.

The first is investment-grade specification β€” every material choice and construction detail is documented against its impact on appraised value and resale narrative. The second is fully permitted, fully inspected scope β€” every element of the work is built to current code and signed off by the City of Dallas, leaving the client with a clean paper trail at sale. The third is finish-photography-ready execution β€” final reveal is staged, photographed, and documented for the homeowner’s records and any future listing presentation.

High-end tier work is engineered for clients who view the residence as a financial asset as well as a personal one. Every decision is made with one eye on the day the home goes to market. In a Lakewood residence β€” particularly one in the 75214 historic conservation zone or in the architectural register of a Tudor and Spanish Eclectic home from the 1920s β€” these three principles produce a fireplace that disappears into its architecture rather than competing with it, and that is the standard we hold our work to.

The Wood-to-Gas Conversion Discipline

Our wood-to-gas conversion practice delivers wood-to-gas fireplace conversion β€” preserving the architectural character of an original masonry firebox while introducing a modern, code-compliant gas burning system. The scope of work on a typical engagement includes evaluation of the existing flue and firebox, gas line routing through finished walls without disturbing original millwork, burner system specification, log set design, ignition and remote integration, and final permitting under the City of Dallas mechanical code, and the timeline runs three to five weeks including permit and inspection from contract through final reveal.

The technical foundation of every project is straightforward β€” every conversion requires gas line sizing per IFGC chapter 4, flue pressure verification, and CO testing at completion β€” work performed under the supervision of our Texas-licensed Master Plumber and signed off against the manufacturer’s listing and the Dallas Mechanical Code. Where the discipline becomes interesting, and where high-end-tier work distinguishes itself, is in the design phase. The single most consequential decision on any fireplace project is the log set realism and the burner pan geometry β€” a properly specified conversion produces a flame pattern that genuinely reads as wood, not as a 1990s gas-log retrofit, and it is precisely the decision that is most often delegated to a generalist remodeler or a manufacturer’s catalog. In Lakewood, where the architectural cost of a wrong proportion is immediately visible against the surrounding moulding, casework, and stonework, this decision merits a longer design conversation than is conventional in the trade.

Every project begins with a measured site visit, an architectural survey of the existing fireplace and its relationship to the room’s other built elements, and a written design brief that the client approves before any drawings are commissioned. The drawings themselves are produced at quarter-inch and half-inch scale, and the client is shown elevations, sections, and a materials board before fabrication begins. This sequence is the slow part of the project β€” three to four weeks before any demolition begins β€” and it is the part of the project that determines whether the finished work will read as architecture or as a renovation.

Architectural Alignment with Lakewood’s Tudor And Spanish Eclectic Idiom

The Lakewood architectural register is dominated by Tudor, Spanish Eclectic, and storybook colonial houses, and each idiom carries its own fireplace vocabulary. A Tudor fireplace is not interchangeable with a Spanish Eclectic fireplace, and a generic surround drawn from a national catalog will not read correctly in either. Our specification practice begins by identifying the architectural register of the host residence and then drawing the fireplace against the conventions of that register.

In a 1920s Tudor home, that means moulding profiles drawn from the period β€” typically a deeper crown and a more substantial mantel shelf than the contemporary catalog default β€” and stone selection that respects the original masonry palette. hand-troweled plaster is the canonical material for this work in Lakewood, and we maintain inventory and shop relationships specifically to deliver it without the lead-time penalty of a one-off order.

The investment range for high-end-tier wood-to-gas conversion work in Lakewood typically falls between $22,000 and $65,000 depending on the scope, the materials specified, and the structural complexity of the existing fireplace. We provide a written, itemized estimate after the initial design consultation, and the estimate distinguishes design fees, material costs, fabrication, and installation as separate line items.

A Recent Lakewood Engagement β€” Tokalon Drive

A representative Lakewood project: a 1929 Spanish Eclectic residence on Tokalon Drive, where the home retained its original clay-tile roof and arched openings, but the fireplace had been clad in 1980s drywall that obscured the hand-troweled plaster surround beneath. The clients had lived in the home for over a decade and had developed a specific point of view about its architectural character. They wanted the fireplace addressed in a way that would survive a future sale, that would respect the original architecture, and that would not introduce an obviously contemporary idiom into a room whose other detailing was original.

Our scope on the project was a comprehensive wood-to-gas conversion. We began with a four-week design phase β€” measured drawings, three rounds of elevation revisions, a materials board built around hand-troweled plaster and reclaimed terra cotta, and a full-scale paper mockup of the proposed mantel taped to the wall for client review. Demolition revealed an unanticipated framing condition in the chimney chase, which we addressed with a structural reframing detail that was documented and signed off by the City of Dallas before the new surround was set.

The fabrication phase ran six weeks in our shop and the on-site installation took eight days. The reveal took place in the late autumn, and the photography of the completed room is in our portfolio. The client investment landed within the original estimate range, the project closed with a clean punch list, and the home was photographed for a regional shelter publication the following spring. The fireplace reads as if it had always been there, which is the standard we measure ourselves against on every Lakewood engagement.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does high-end-tier wood-to-gas conversion work cost in Lakewood?

The investment range for our high-end-tier wood-to-gas conversion work in Lakewood typically falls between $22,000 and $65,000, depending on the scope of demolition required, the materials specified, and the structural condition of the existing fireplace. We provide a written, itemized estimate after the initial design consultation that distinguishes design fees, material costs, fabrication, and installation as separate line items, so the client can see exactly where the budget is allocated and why.

How long does a typical Lakewood wood-to-gas conversion project take?

From the first design conversation through final reveal, a typical Lakewood wood-to-gas conversion project runs three to five weeks including permit and inspection. The design phase β€” measured drawings, elevation revisions, and materials review β€” takes three to four weeks. Fabrication of the mantel and surround in our shop runs four to six weeks, and the on-site installation typically takes one to two weeks. We hold the schedule against published milestones and report progress to the client weekly.

Will wood-to-gas conversion work disrupt the original architecture of a Tudor home?

Properly executed, no. The first principle of our high-end-tier practice is architectural respect β€” we begin every Lakewood engagement with a survey of the existing architectural language and a written brief identifying what must be preserved, what may be respectfully replaced, and what should be added. In a Tudor home, that typically means preserving original moulding registers, matching stone or plaster finishes to existing palette, and drawing new elements at proportions consistent with the period. The goal is for the finished fireplace to read as if it had always been there.

Do you handle the City of Dallas permitting for this work?

Yes. Every wood-to-gas conversion project that touches the firebox, the flue, the gas line, or any structural element is permitted under the City of Dallas Building Inspection Division and signed off by the jurisdictional inspector at completion. Our project manager handles the permit application, schedules the inspections, and delivers the signed-off paperwork to the client at project close. This is non-negotiable on our engagements β€” unpermitted work is a future title-and-sale problem we will not create for a client.

Can you work alongside our existing architect or interior designer?

We do this on a majority of our Lakewood engagements. Our drawings integrate into the project architect’s or interior designer’s drawing set, and we attend the client’s design meetings as the fireplace specialist. We are accustomed to working as one trade among several on a residential project of significant scope, and we hold our schedule against the general contractor’s master timeline. Where the client has not yet engaged a designer or architect and wants the fireplace addressed as a self-contained scope, we lead the engagement directly.

About the Author

This page was reviewed by the design director of Texas Service Experts, who has led the firm’s Lakewood-area fireplace practice since 2014 and whose portfolio includes engagements in the White Rock Lake corridor and Lakewood Country Club. Our design director holds a Bachelor of Architecture and oversees every high-end-tier engagement from the initial design conversation through final reveal.

To schedule a consultation about a wood-to-gas conversion project in Lakewood, please call ☎ 214-444-8094 or contact our office through the website.

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