Dated Brick Fireplace Makeover in Frisco, Texas
A dated brick fireplace anchors a room in a previous decade. The mortar lines feel heavy, the red orange tone fights every other finish, and the proportion rarely lands with contemporary furniture. A considered makeover does not simply paint over the brick. It re-reads the wall, re-balances the proportions, and selects a finish that lets the architecture breathe. In Frisco, the architectural context shapes the answer. Frisco’s newer construction features bigger great rooms and taller ceilings, which open the door to wider linear gas units, taller surrounds, and more ambitious mantel scale. A fireplace project in this neighborhood is not a generic upgrade. It is a measured response to a particular home’s typology, scale, and interior vocabulary. We approach every dated brick fireplace makeover engagement in Frisco as a design problem first and a construction problem second.
Why This Matters in Frisco
Frisco homes carry a specific architectural register. Frisco’s newer construction features bigger great rooms and taller ceilings, which open the door to wider linear gas units, taller surrounds, and more ambitious mantel scale. The neighborhoods we work in most often, including Stonebriar, Phillips Creek Ranch, Newman Village, share a recognizable design culture: considered material selection, attention to scale, and a preference for refinement over flash. A brick makeover project that ignores this register reads as out of place, even when the construction quality is sound. Our job is to keep the work consistent with the home’s voice while introducing the function and finish the homeowner wants. City of Frisco permits also influences scope, scheduling, and sometimes structural detailing, and we coordinate that paperwork as part of the engagement.
Material and Method Options
We approach brick makeovers in three lanes: limewash for a softer historic patina, German smear or mortar wash for textural depth, or a full surround wrap in stone, plaster, or paneling. Each lane has different cost, durability, and reversibility characteristics that we weigh against the architecture. The table below summarizes the materials and methods we specify most often for brick makeover work in Frisco, with character notes and the architectural styles each option suits best.
| Material / Method | Character | Best Suited For |
|—|—|—|
| Romabio limewash | Mineral-based, breathable, ages naturally | Tudor, Georgian, transitional |
| German smear (mortar wash) | Hand-troweled, irregular, old-world texture | European farmhouse, French country |
| Lueders limestone wrap | 6,000-7,000 PSI Texas limestone, full reface | Hill Country, transitional, contemporary |
| Venetian plaster | Polished or matte, tonal depth | Mediterranean, modern, contemporary |
| Cordova Cream limestone | Warm cream Texas limestone, dimensional | Tudor revival, transitional |
| Shiplap or v-groove paneling | Painted millwork wrap with new mantel | Coastal, farmhouse, transitional |
Selection is rarely automatic. We sample materials in the actual room, study them under the actual lighting at morning, midday, and evening, and let the architecture make the call rather than the showroom.
Our Design Process
We run every brick makeover engagement through six stages, each one keyed to a deliverable the homeowner or designer can review before we move on.
1. Discovery. A site visit, photographs, dimensional notes, and a conversation about how the room is actually used. We ask about furniture plan, light, the role of the fireplace in the room’s evening rhythm, and any preferences about materials the homeowner has already started collecting.
2. Design. Elevations and at least three material options for the primary surface. Mantel proportion drawn at full scale. Where applicable, a 3D study of the firebox-to-mantel relationship and the screen or art placement above.
3. Spec. A complete specification document covering every material, every dimension, every gas or electrical detail, and every finish. The spec is what the build runs from. Nothing important should be decided on the floor.
4. Build. Demolition, structural work, framing modifications, gas line and venting per code, masonry or millwork installation, and protection of the surrounding rooms. Daily site cleanup is non-negotiable.
5. Finish. Stone polishing, mortar joint tuning, paint and stain application, hardware install, and the slow careful work of getting reveal lines tight and corners crisp.
6. Walkthrough. A formal review with the homeowner and any participating designer, a written punch list, and a closeout package with care instructions, manufacturer documentation for any installed appliances, and warranty paperwork.
Investment Range
Dated Brick Fireplace Makeover projects in Frisco typically fall between approximately $4,000 and $25,000, with most homes landing in the middle of that band. Project cost is driven by surround material, mantel material, firebox replacement scope, gas line work, structural modifications, and the scale of the existing wall. SFS operates a Trade Pro program offering qualified designers, architects, and builders 15% off install scope with priority scheduling. We provide a written estimate after the discovery visit and a fixed-price proposal once selections and scope are locked. The number rarely moves once we are building, because we have already drawn and specified the work in detail.
Recent Work in Frisco
Two recent engagements illustrate the range of brick makeover work we have completed for Frisco clients.
Case Study One: Lebanon Road Frisco
A 2005-present transitional and contemporary home on Lebanon Road carried a brick makeover that no longer matched the homeowners’ updated interior. The original surround read heavy, the firebox proportion fought the new furniture plan, and the mantel sat too high above a sofa that had been re-scaled during the last refresh. We re-drew the wall in elevation, lowered the firebox by four inches, specified a new romabio limewash surround, and tuned the mantel depth to the room’s new geometry. The build ran roughly six weeks from final approved drawings through punch list. Project investment landed at approximately $8,800 to $14,200, inclusive of design, demo, structural review, surround material, mantel, and finish work.
Case Study Two: Eldorado Parkway Frisco
A second project on Eldorado Parkway addressed a brick makeover where the original 2005-present transitional and contemporary character had been buried under a 1990s-era update. The owners and their interior designer asked us to bring the fireplace back into conversation with the home’s architecture. We selected german smear (mortar wash) for the primary surround surface, detailed the mantel as a lueders limestone wrap, and coordinated every transition with the surrounding millwork the designer had specified for the room. Investment fell within approximately $6,400 to $11,000, with a build window of roughly four to five weeks once selections were locked.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will my HOA or design review board need to approve this work?
For interior brick makeover work, HOA review is typically not required, though some Frisco neighborhoods (notably Highland Park, Forest Hills, and select master-planned communities) maintain stricter oversight on chimney and exterior changes. We coordinate any required submission and can prepare drawings in the format the reviewing body expects. For outdoor fireplace work, exterior changes almost always trigger review, and we build that timeline into the project schedule.
How long does a typical project take in Frisco?
Most brick makeover projects run between four and eight weeks from approved final drawings through punch list, with about one to two weeks of that on site. Lead times for stone, custom millwork, and any specified appliances can extend the front of the schedule. We share a written timeline with each proposal and update it weekly during the build.
What about permits and gas line work?
Permits are pulled per City of Frisco permits for any structural, gas, or venting work. Gas line installation in Texas is performed by a licensed plumber under the relevant chapters of the Texas Plumbing Code and the International Fuel Gas Code, with leak testing and inspection at completion. We handle the licensing coordination so the homeowner does not have to manage that workflow.
Can my interior designer or architect be part of the process?
Yes. SFS operates a Trade Pro program offering qualified designers, architects, and builders 15% off install scope and priority scheduling. We work to your drawings, finish schedules, and specifications, and we flag any constructibility or code concerns early so the design can adapt without compromising intent.
Should I choose gas or wood for this project?
Most Frisco clients today choose gas for the convenience, the cleaner air quality, and the simpler maintenance, while a meaningful minority preserve wood-burning operation in historic homes where the original masonry firebox is part of the architecture. We walk through the trade-offs of each path during discovery: heat output, fuel cost, code requirements, chimney condition, and the visual character of the flame. The right answer is specific to the home.
Schedule a Consultation
Space Fireplace Services is a fireplace install atelier serving North Dallas and Denton County, with a Trade Pro program that gives designers, architects, and builders 15% off install scope and priority scheduling on qualified projects. If you are weighing a dated brick fireplace makeover project in Frisco and want a measured, designer-led perspective rather than a rushed estimate, we would be glad to walk the space with you, study the architecture, and draw two or three options before any commitment. Schedule a consultation, Trade Pros welcome by calling 817-635-6260 or reaching out through the site. We will respond within one business day with availability, scope clarification, and the next concrete step.