Gas Conversion and Remodel Together – The Kansas City Combo Upgrade

Blueprints tell the story before anyone picks up a hammer-and on real Kansas City jobs, combining a wood-to-gas conversion with a fireplace wall remodel typically saves homeowners $1,500-$3,000 compared to tackling them as two separate projects, because you open the wall once, reroute gas and venting once, and avoid tearing into fresh finishes later. I’m going to walk you through how I plan these combo upgrades in KC-think of it like popping the entire dashboard off an old pickup truck one time instead of three-so you can see exactly where your money and your safety actually sit inside this project.

Why Combining Gas Conversion and Remodel Saves Serious Money in KC

From a technician’s point of view, separating a gas conversion from a remodel is like rebuilding an engine twice because you didn’t want to pop the hood all the way the first time. On real KC jobs, doing gas and the remodel together usually saves $1,500-$3,000 over two separate projects-and that’s a conservative number. The savings stack up fast: you’re opening the wall once, running gas line and venting before any tile or drywall goes back up, and setting framing clearances around the actual appliance you’re installing instead of guessing. When you phase these projects, you end up with a GC or tile installer undoing finished work just to let me back in. That demolition cost lands on your invoice twice.

Here’s the thing I always say to skeptical customers: if you’re upgrading the gauges and rewiring everything behind that old dashboard, you don’t pull the dash twice. Same exact logic applies to your fireplace wall. The gas unit is the engine cluster-it drives everything. The tile surround, shiplap, or stone is the bezel around it. The TV mount and built-in shelves are the gauges on either side. Move one piece without planning around the rest, and the wiring-and sometimes the framing-behind it has to move too. Doing it in one coordinated push is just smarter.

KC Cost Comparison: Separate vs. Combined Gas + Remodel
Scenario What’s Involved Done Separately Done Together
Vented gas log conversion + simple surround retile New vented log set, gas line, damper clamp; remove old tile, new tile surround $5,000-$7,000 $4,000-$6,000 when gas rough-in and backing are done before tile
Direct-vent gas insert + full wall redesign Insert + liner, gas, electrical; new mantel, shiplap or stone, TV wiring $8,500-$13,000 $7,000-$11,000 when framing, chase mods, and vent terminations are planned once
Linear gas unit + built-in shelving Framing new opening, linear insert, venting; custom built-ins and lighting $12,000-$18,000 $10,000-$16,000 with one coordinated rough-in phase
Chimney repair + cosmetic refacing later Liner, crown or chase repair now; stone/veneer added years later $6,000-$10,000 $4,500-$8,000 if structure, gas, and finish are designed together

Top Reasons to Combine Gas Conversion and Remodel

  • ✅ One permit and inspection cycle instead of two.
  • ✅ Gas line and vent run once, before drywall and tile go up.
  • ✅ Framing and clearances set for the actual appliance size and heat output from day one.
  • ✅ No tearing out new finishes to fix hidden code problems later.
  • ✅ Easier coordination with your GC or designer on TV placement, outlets, and shelving layout.

What We Plan Before Anyone Swings a Hammer

When I first walk into a home, the first question I ask isn’t “gas or wood?”-it’s “Are you planning to touch this wall in the next five years?” On a humid June afternoon in Overland Park, I was working with a couple who wanted to convert their wood fireplace to gas while they tore out built-in bookshelves. Their contractor had already demoed half the wall when I noticed the gas stub-out they’d planned to reuse was capped behind a decorative column that was now sitting in a dumpster. I can still picture kneeling on their bare subfloor, sweat dripping, walking them through how rerouting that line during the remodel-right then, while the wall was open-would run a couple hundred extra dollars. Doing it later would mean reopening everything for thousands. Pre-planning gas routing while walls are open isn’t optional. It’s the whole point.

And KC isn’t one-size-fits-all when it comes to these projects. Brookside and Waldo homes are often full masonry construction with older, offset flues that don’t behave the way modern gas inserts expect. Overland Park and Olathe newer builds have framed chases and more predictable venting paths, but the clearances and gas line routing still need to be mapped before the GC locks in wall framing. Plaza condos are their own category entirely-shared chases, HOA documentation requirements, and building maintenance teams that have opinions about vent terminations. Every neighborhood type needs an upfront plan for vent path, gas route, and clearances before anyone starts hanging drywall or ordering stone.

KC Combo Upgrade: Pre-Project Planning Checklist
  1. Fireplace & chimney assessment – Confirm if it’s masonry or prefab, check liner condition, chimney height, and existing cap.
  2. Choose gas system type – Vented logs, direct-vent insert, or linear unit based on room size, use, and heat goals.
  3. Map vent route – Decide if we’re using the existing chimney, adding a liner, or venting out a sidewall or new chase.
  4. Plan gas line path – From meter or manifold to fireplace, with shutoff location and access points marked before framing starts.
  5. Coordinate framing changes – Adjust firebox opening, mantel height, TV niche, and built-in dimensions for heat and code clearances.
  6. Lock in electrical needs – Outlets for blower, accent lights, or TV, plus smart controls-run all of this before drywall closes up.
  7. Sequence the trades – Agree with your remodel contractor on which days ChimneyKS is roughing in, testing, and trimming out so no one is waiting on each other.

Designing the ‘Dashboard’: Firebox, Wall, and Built-Ins Together

At least once a week, I’m standing in someone’s Kansas City living room saying, “If you’re ever going to do this, do it now while the wall’s open.” That Brookside cold-snap job in January 2021 is the clearest example I can give you. The homeowners were deep in a debate about tile colors while I was measuring, and I realized their original mason had run the old flue in a weird offset that would flat-out choke a modern gas insert. I stopped the whole conversation, grabbed their kid’s dry-erase board, and drew out why shifting the firebox opening three inches during the remodel phase would head off a real carbon monoxide problem down the road-and save them from tearing out whatever beautiful tile they’d just picked. A small structural adjustment during the remodel solved a future draft and CO issue before the finishes ever went in. That’s the whole game.

Think about it through the dashboard lens: the gas unit is the engine cluster-it’s the mechanical core driving heat, venting, and clearance requirements. The tile or shiplap surrounding it is the bezel, purely cosmetic. The TV mount and built-in shelves flanking it are the gauges. And here’s the thing about old dashboards-the moment you decide to move one gauge, everything behind it has to shift too. Wiring, brackets, sometimes the ductwork running through the dash cavity. Fireplace walls work exactly the same way. Decide to widen the firebox opening or swap to a linear unit after the GC has already framed and drywalled, and you’re not just changing the “gauge.” You’re reopening the whole cavity.

My insider tip, and I give this to every customer planning a convert wood fireplace to gas remodel: lock in the appliance type and layout first-centered, off-center, traditional box, or linear-then pick your finish materials. Changing out tile or stone late in the project is inconvenient and costs a few hundred dollars. Changing venting runs, repositioning the gas line, or resizing the framed opening after drywall is up costs a few thousand. The guts have to come first. Always.

Planned Together vs. Planned Separately: What Actually Happens

✅ Combo Upgrade (Planned Together)

  • Fireplace dimensions, mantel height, and TV niche sized to the chosen gas unit from day one.
  • Gas line and vent terminations hidden cleanly inside planned chases and soffits.
  • Heat output matched to room size and furniture layout before finishes are ordered.
  • One dust cycle, one set of inspections, one disruption to your living room.

❌ Separate Projects

  • GC frames and finishes the wall first, then we discover the gas insert doesn’t fit or doesn’t meet clearance.
  • Visible bump-outs, odd soffits, or boxed-in chases get added after the fact to hide venting.
  • Fireplace ends up too hot for the TV and finishes, or too weak to feel from across the room.
  • Two rounds of demo, dust, and furniture shuffling when the second phase kicks off.

If we pick tile before we fix venting, we’re just decorating a problem.

How a KC Gas Conversion + Remodel Actually Runs, Step by Step

A few falls ago, right before kickoff on a Chiefs Sunday, I was rushing to wrap a Plaza condo job. The owner wanted a linear gas fireplace and a floating concrete mantel as part of a full condo facelift-and midway through setting the insert, the building’s maintenance guy walked in and told me their shared flue system couldn’t handle the vent plan the designer had drawn. I had to call an audible on the spot, redesign the vent route to a different chase, and explain to a very stressed homeowner why this was actually good news. Because we were combining the gas conversion with the remodel-rather than doing gas first and remodel later-we caught that conflict while the accent wall was still open. If we’d done just the gas conversion as a standalone first phase, that beautiful accent wall he’d already planned would’ve been torn out a month later. Combo scheduling let us pivot without any extra demo costs.

The project itself runs in two clean phases. Phase one is rough-in: demo the old facing and mantel, open the chase or wall sections as needed, repair or adjust framing, run the gas line, set the vent or liner path, install any new chase or termination, pressure-test, and get inspection sign-off. ChimneyKS leads that phase. Phase two is finish: the GC or carpenter handles drywall, backing, and framing tweaks, then tile, stone, shiplap, and mantels go in once all rough work is approved. ChimneyKS comes back to set and connect the gas log set or insert, run final leak tests, adjust the flame pattern, and do a full walkthrough. Two distinct phases, one coordinated plan, no surprises when the wall closes up.

Typical KC Combo Upgrade Timeline
1

Design & estimate (1-2 visits) – ChimneyKS and your remodel contractor agree on appliance type, layout, and rough-in requirements before anything is ordered.

2

Demo & structural prep (1-2 days) – Remove old facing and mantel, open chase or wall sections, repair or adjust framing as needed.

3

Gas and vent rough-in (1 day) – Run gas line, set vent or liner path, install any new chase or termination, pressure-test, and get inspection sign-off.

4

Wall build-out (2-5 days) – GC or carpenter handles framing tweaks, drywall, and backing for heavy materials or mantels once rough-in is approved.

5

Finish surfaces (2-5 days) – Tile, stone, plaster, shiplap, mantels, and built-ins go in once all rough work is signed off and wall is closed.

6

Set and connect unit (½-1 day) – Place gas log set or insert, make final connections, leak-test, and adjust flame pattern.

7

Final testing & walkthrough (½ day) – Verify draft and clearances, review operation with homeowner, hand over manuals and maintenance plan.

Who Leads What: ChimneyKS vs. Your GC

Call ChimneyKS First

  • You smell gas, see scorch marks, or suspect a flue problem before or during demo.
  • You’re not sure the existing chimney or vent can support the gas unit your designer picked.
  • The wall is already open and you just discovered an old gas line or mystery vent.
  • Your city or HOA is asking for venting or appliance documentation before permits clear.

GC Can Lead

  • Choosing tile, mantel style, paint colors, or shelving layout-all cosmetic decisions.
  • Framing decorative niches or running low-voltage wiring for TVs and speakers.
  • Ordering furniture and planning where people will actually sit relative to the fire.
  • Final touch-ups on drywall, trim, and paint after the unit is tested and approved.

Code, Safety, and Making Sure the ‘Pretty’ Part Still Works in 10 Years

Here’s the blunt truth: the shiplap, the stone veneer, and the 85-inch TV mounted above your new gas fireplace don’t mean a thing if the clearances to combustibles, vent specs, and gas code underneath them are wrong. Think of your fireplace like the dashboard of a ’70s pickup-rewiring and moving gauges can be genuinely satisfying work, but if you forget the fuse box, you end up stuck on the side of I-70 with a dashboard that looks great and does nothing. A beautiful fireplace wall built over a bad core is the same story. The tile doesn’t fix a draft problem. The floating mantel doesn’t fix a CO risk. We get the core right, and then the pretty stuff gets to be pretty for the next twenty years.

Non-Negotiables Before We Sign Off on Your Combo Upgrade

  • ✅ Listed gas appliance installed per manufacturer specs-no improvised modifications.
  • ✅ Clearances to combustibles (mantel, TV, trim) measured and documented before finishes go on.
  • ✅ Vent terminations located where KC wind loads and winter snow won’t cause chronic draft or backdraft issues.
  • ✅ Gas shutoff accessible without tearing into finished walls-ever.
  • ✅ CO detectors installed and tested on the appropriate levels of the home before the project closes out.

Questions KC Homeowners Ask Most About Combo Upgrades
Can we keep burning wood after converting to gas?

In most cases, no. Once we install a listed gas insert or dedicated log set and alter the damper or venting system, that firebox is no longer approved for wood burning. It’s a code issue, not just a preference.

Will the heat damage my TV or new finishes?

We size the unit and set clearances specifically to protect TVs, mantels, and wall coverings. And if your design is asking for something that won’t hold up to the heat output-we’ll tell you plainly before anything is installed.

Do I call ChimneyKS or my remodel contractor first?

If gas, venting, or safety are any part of the question, start with ChimneyKS. If it’s purely about layout, storage, or finishes, your GC can lead and loop us in early-which is honestly the best setup for everyone.

How long does the whole project take?

Most combo gas and remodel projects run 1-3 weeks on-site, depending on materials lead time and permit turnaround. ChimneyKS is on-site for the key rough-in and finish days; your GC fills in the middle.

The best time to plan gas conversion, venting, and wall finishes together is before the first tile is picked-not after the wall is already closed and the inspector is asking questions. Call ChimneyKS and let Daniel or one of our other techs walk through your existing fireplace and remodel plans at the same time, sketch out a clear combo-upgrade roadmap, and put together a detailed estimate so there are zero surprises once the wall comes open.