# Ventless & Electric Fireplace in Design District — Space Fireplace Services
In Dallas Design District, ventless & electric fireplace is never just a transaction — it’s a design decision inside a neighborhood that has its own architectural language. Space Fireplace Services has built its practice around loft conversions in former showroom buildings, exposed concrete and steel, polished trowel-finish plaster walls, gallery-grade lighting, fireplaces as sculptural objects, and installing a fireplace here means starting with the room, not the catalog. Our clients in Design District are art dealers living above their galleries, design-trade clients buying second residences, principals of firms in the Howard Hughes corridor — people who care how the surround meets the ceiling, how the flame reads against the wall finish, and how the new fireplace lives with the rest of the house. Ventless & Electric Fireplace on these projects is about selecting between ventless gas and electric based on heat output and code, recessed niche vs. wall-mount vs. built-in, flame realism, and integrated media, and we approach it the same way the designers and trade pros we partner with would: small decisions, made early, that determine whether the finished room looks intentional or improvised. The scale of work we do in Design District runs to architectural — 72″ to 120″ linear gas units, peninsula and three-sided installs, frameless single-pane fronts, integrated media walls, and we keep our project load deliberately small so that every ventless & electric fireplace job gets the principal’s attention, the right specifier from our team, and an installer who has done this same ventless & electric fireplace in this same neighborhood before. We don’t take volume work and we don’t discount to win projects — we work alongside interior designers and architects working out of showrooms in the district itself — the trade is the client and the audience, and the only way that relationship survives is by delivering exactly what was spec’d, on the day we said we would.
## Why Design District Ventless & Electric Fireplace Is Its Own Discipline
The ventless & electric fireplace we do in Design District doesn’t translate cleanly from a generic suburban install. What makes Design District Design District — loft conversions in former showroom buildings, exposed concrete and steel, polished trowel-finish plaster walls, gallery-grade lighting, fireplaces as sculptural objects — also defines the constraints we work inside. The specifics that show up here over and over: concrete decks and CMU walls that require core-drilling for venting, ceiling heights from 14 to 22 feet that make standard sizing absurd, building managers who require COIs and after-hours work windows. A contractor whose portfolio is tract-home work will miss those, and the room will read ‘almost right’ for the next decade. Our work is calibrated to gallery — fireplaces specified the way you’d specify a Donald Judd, with the same expectation of finish quality — that’s the register the rest of the house is in, and the new fireplace has to match it.
## What Ventless & Electric Fireplace Looks Like on a Design District Project
Every ventless & electric fireplace project here runs a consistent process: we confirm code allowance for ventless gas in the jurisdiction (or default to electric), frame the niche, run the gas or electrical, install the unit, and finish the surround. The first conversation is a walk-through, not a sales call. We sit in the room, look at the wall, and only then narrow the unit list. The design decisions that matter most are selecting between ventless gas and electric based on heat output and code, recessed niche vs. wall-mount vs. built-in, flame realism, and integrated media — filtered through the neighborhood’s design DNA. A reveal that works in a Design District loft would feel cold in a Bishop Arts bungalow.
### The Design Vocabulary We Use in Design District
In practice that means architectural — 72″ to 120″ linear gas units, peninsula and three-sided installs, frameless single-pane fronts, integrated media walls. Inside that palette, the variables we obsess over are surround material, reveal detailing, mantel proportion, and the relationship to whatever sits above the fireplace. We bring physical samples to the second meeting — porcelain slabs, limestone offcuts, blackened steel mock-ups — because nobody picks a finish from a website. The goal is a fireplace that looks like it was always meant to be there.
### Trade-Pro and Designer Coordination
A meaningful share of our Design District work comes through interior designers and architects working out of showrooms in the district itself — the trade is the client and the audience. When we’re brought in early — before drywall, before the mantel — the install goes in cleanly the first time. We deliver framing specs, venting drawings, and finish-reveal details directly to the design team, and we don’t deviate without sign-off. That’s what keeps the designer relationship alive across multiple projects.
### Considerations Specific to Ventless & Electric Fireplace
Technical considerations on every job: Texas code restrictions on ventless gas in bedrooms and small enclosed spaces, electrical load and dedicated-circuit requirements, and humidity considerations for ventless gas. In Design District those get layered onto the neighborhood specifics. We don’t subcontract the diagnostic walk-through, we don’t hand the install to a day-labor crew, and we don’t take final payment until the unit is tested under load.
## Permits, Code, and HOA in Design District
Every ventless & electric fireplace we do here gets permitted. We pull the permit, coordinate inspection, and leave a closed-out file. Where Design District adds a Conservation District, HOA ARC, or building-management approval on top of the city permit, we run that submittal in parallel. We won’t put a chimney termination or vent cap somewhere that earns a stop-work order three weeks in.
## What a Design District Ventless & Electric Fireplace Project Costs
We don’t publish package pricing — no two of these projects are the same. Every quote starts with a free on-site inspection and a written fixed-price quote within 48 hours. Timeline from signed quote to install typically runs 3–6 weeks depending on unit lead time and trade coordination.
## Frequently Asked About Design District Ventless & Electric Fireplace
**Do you only do ventless & electric fireplace in Design District, or do you work elsewhere?**
We work across DFW, but Design District is one of the design enclaves where we keep a deliberate concentration of ventless & electric fireplace projects. That focus is intentional — the trade-pro and designer relationships in Design District drive most of our work here, and we’re not interested in being a generalist.
**How does ventless & electric fireplace in Design District differ from ventless & electric fireplace in a generic suburban build?**
The design constraint is different. Design District is defined by loft conversions in former showroom buildings, exposed concrete and steel, polished trowel-finish plaster walls, gallery-grade lighting, fireplaces as sculptural objects, which means ventless & electric fireplace has to be calibrated to that. A standard ventless & electric fireplace spec’d off a catalog will read wrong in this neighborhood; the work we do here is informed by gallery — fireplaces specified the way you’d specify a Donald Judd, with the same expectation of finish quality.
**Will you coordinate with my designer or architect on a Design District ventless & electric fireplace project?**
Yes — and we prefer it. A meaningful share of our work here comes through interior designers and architects working out of showrooms in the district itself — the trade is the client and the audience, and the projects that go in cleanest are the ones where we’re at the table during early design. We deliver framing specs, venting drawings, and reveal details directly to the design team.
**What’s the lead time on a ventless & electric fireplace project in Design District?**
Typically 3–6 weeks from signed quote to install, driven mostly by unit lead time and trade coordination. Custom-surround work or Design District-specific HOA/Conservation review can extend that — we’ll give you an honest date in the first meeting and we’ll hit it.
**Do you handle the permit and HOA submittal for ventless & electric fireplace in Design District?**
Yes. We pull the city permit, schedule the inspection, and run any HOA or Conservation District review in parallel. Design District has its own review specifics and we’ve done enough work here to navigate them without surprises.
