First Time Building A Stone Fire Pit… Did I Make A Mistake Here?
I want to build a natural-looking firepit. What works and what explodes?
Best kinds of stones for fire pit?
Is there a fire / heat safe way to fill in the stone look on our fire pit and make it look smooth? I love the look of the sleek modern cement fire pits, but can’t justify the $500 price tag when we have a functional one with an outdated look.
Videos
Since I can’t show a photo for reference, can anyone point me in the right direction to the best kinds of stone (and where I can buy them) to use for a DIY fire pit?
Any help is greatly appreciated!
I have a large area in my backyard where a 24’ above ground pool used to be and I got the idea to turn the area into a stone fire pit with a gravel seating area around it.
Over the weekend I got the stone fire pit built and it looks good to me. It feels very sturdy and I got it completely leveled. But, I was doing some reading on DIY fire pit areas because I am going to finish it this weekend when I realized that most people use gravel or paver base under the fire pit and build on top of that. I guess I should’ve researched more, but I only used sand and tampered that down level.
Now I’m second guessing myself and am wondering if this will be an issue down the road. I used landscape adhesive on all the stone blocks already too. Should I just keep moving forward and if it falls apart redo it then? I’ve attached some pics of the project so far.
I like the feel of an open fire. We had a ring of stones that was ~6 inches tall (as tall as the stones) right on the ground at our old place. It was perfect, but my wife wants a better looking firepit here. We were thinking about getting free bricks or stones from someone on facebook marketplace except I am reading some people say the bricks might explode due to rapid heating and cooling. What's the move for a simple, natural-looking (not suburban crisp) firepit?