Practical data on hearth clearances, flue sizing, firewood drying, and annual chimney inspection requirements for wood-burning installations in Poland.
Each area below covers specific technical requirements that apply to residential wood-burning systems under Polish building regulations.
Each appliance type has different installation requirements, flue diameter ranges, and maintenance schedules.
Traditional brick or stone construction with an open combustion chamber. Heat output is primarily radiant. Requires a correctly sized throat damper and smoke shelf. Flue diameter typically 200–250 mm for residential installations.
A sealed cast iron or steel firebox with a glass door. More efficient than an open fireplace. Must meet Ecodesign 2022 requirements for particulate emissions when sold in Poland. Flue connection 150–180 mm depending on rated output.
Burns compressed wood pellets with an automated feed mechanism. Requires an external air supply and a smaller-diameter flue (80–130 mm) compared to log-burning appliances. Annual cleaning intervals vary by usage intensity.
| Standard / Regulation | Scope | Key Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| PN-EN 13229 | Inset appliances and open fireplaces | Specifies minimum clearances to combustibles, flue outlet dimensions, and test methods |
| PN-EN 13240 | Room heaters burning solid fuel | Efficiency and emissions requirements; clearance tables by rated heat output |
| Rozporządzenie MI z 2002 r. (§ 133–134) | Polish building code | Mandatory chimney cross-section minimums; one chimney per dwelling floor |
| Ecodesign Regulation (EU) 2015/1185 | Solid-fuel local space heaters | Seasonal energy efficiency ≥65%; particulate emissions ≤50 mg/m³ |
| DIN 4705 (reference method) | Flue dimensioning | Calculates required flue internal area based on appliance output, flue height, and fuel type |
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