Electric Fireplaces for Hotels & Commercial Spaces: Design, Safety & Compliance

Electric fireplaces let hotels add fireplace features to any room, lobby, or bar without gas lines, ventilation ducting, or structural modifications. They are the most cost-effective and code-simple way to introduce fire into a commercial space. Hotels with strong design-driven ambience see 15% more revenue per occupied room, and 23% of guests report increased repeat bookings when they experience exceptional atmospheric design—ambience is no longer a luxury detail, it's a competitive advantage.
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Why Hotels Are Installing Electric Fireplaces

Electric fireplaces unlock a straightforward business case for commercial hospitality spaces. Unlike gas or wood-burning alternatives, they require no chimney, no ventilation ducting, no gas line infrastructure, and no long-form regulatory approvals. This means hotels can specify fireplaces for penthouses, suites, lobbies, restaurants, and spas without expensive structural modifications or months of compliance review.

The guest experience impact is immediate. A fireplace becomes a focal point—a moment of pause in design-conscious spaces. The Wyndham Grand London Chelsea Harbour, a five-star all-suite property, opted for electric fireplaces in penthouse suites specifically because no gas infrastructure existed in those spaces. The alternative would have been to leave those rooms without a signature fireplace feature. Similarly, The May Fair Bar in London, voted one of the city's best hotel bars, integrated electric flame technology to create intimate gathering zones without venting challenges. Both properties recognised what leading hospitality designers now expect: guest perception of luxury and care is shaped by atmospheric design, and electric fireplaces deliver that without compromise.

LED Technology: What Makes Commercial-Grade Electric Fireplaces Different

Commercial-grade electric fireplaces are not the bedside units from a decade ago. EcoSmart Fire's dual-series architecture—Motion Picture technology and Switch FX technology—represents the current standard for hospitality installations.

Motion Picture technology uses video-quality LED rendering to display realistic flame motion across large wall formats. The Motion series spans six sizes from the Motion 30 through to the Motion 120 (120 cm width), with each size offering the same lifespan and consistent performance. The flame display updates 30 times per second, creating motion depth that mimics the behaviour of real fire. This becomes critical in high-end hospitality spaces where a static or artificial-looking flame would undermine the luxury positioning.

Switch FX technology employs high-definition LED flame simulation optimised for recessed or built-in applications. The Switch FX series (models 44, 56, 68, 80, 96, and 120) delivers comparable realism in formats suited to architectural integration—think flush-mounted lobby features or within millwork. Both technology lines share a critical specification: LED lifespan of 25,000 to 100,000+ hours depending on brightness settings, far exceeding incandescent bulbs.

In flame-only mode (where ambience matters more than heat), these units draw just 50 to 150 watts—essentially the power requirement of a few light bulbs. This low operating power is why flame-only operation costs so little to run. When heating is required, power draw rises to 750 to 1,500 watts for supplemental zone heating, delivering 0.9 to 1.5 kW [3,000 to 5,000 BTU]—appropriate for guest rooms and intimate spaces rather than whole-floor conditioning. This distinction matters for commercial buildings where HVAC systems handle primary climate control and electric fireplaces serve ambience and supplemental warmth.

Safety & Compliance for Hotel Installations

Electric fireplaces eliminate most fireplace-related safety and regulatory friction. Here's what commercial building inspectors and hotel developers need to know.

All EcoSmart Fire electric models carry UL and ETL certifications—the two major North American safety standards that building inspectors recognise as equivalent. (Both undergo identical testing protocols; UL and ETL differ in administrative structure, not stringency.) European installations require CE marking, which EcoSmart Fire products also hold. From an inspection standpoint, UL/ETL-listed equipment satisfies requirements in the 2024 International Building Code Chapter 27, which governs commercial electrical safety. No additional flame safety approvals are needed because there is no flame.

Electric fireplaces produce zero emissions—no carbon dioxide, no particulates, no odour. They require no combustion air ventilation, no chimney, and no flue. This removes an entire category of NFPA (National Fire Protection Association) compliance that would apply to gas or wood-burning systems. For a five-star hotel with strict air quality and odour management requirements, this eliminates an entire compliance category.

Cool-to-touch surfaces and automatic overheat protection are standard features. The front glass or façade stays warm but safe to touch, even during extended operation. Overheat sensors shut the unit down if internal temperatures exceed safe thresholds—a safeguard that means housekeeping staff, guests, and compliance teams can all be confident in continuous operation without thermal risk.

Design Flexibility Across Commercial Spaces

Electric fireplaces adapt to the architectural logic of different hospitality zones, each with its own scale and installation constraint.

Penthouses and high-end suites benefit from large-format wall installations. The Motion 100 and Motion 120 deliver commanding visual presence in open-plan living areas, anchoring the room without requiring structural modification. A Motion 120 at 120 cm width becomes a bold design statement while drawing minimal power when used in flame-only mode.

Smaller guest rooms and studios work with the Motion 52 or Motion 60, sized for vertical walls above a console or between architectural features. These compact formats still deliver full realism but occupy less visual real estate.

Lobbies and public gathering spaces support larger installations, often custom-integrated into millwork. The Switch series excels here because its architecture suits recessed or built-in mounting—flush integration that reads as part of the architectural material palette rather than an appliance bolted to a wall.

Restaurants, bars, and spa lounges benefit from the ambient-only operating mode. Turning on the flame at 50–150 watts creates atmospheric focus without heating the space, perfect for venues where HVAC already handles climate. A lounge area with three small electric focal points running at 100 watts each costs less than $15 per month to operate.

2025 and 2026 hospitality design trends favour warm, grounded spaces with layered lighting and soft diffused ambience. Fireplace flames satisfy both functional and aesthetic requirements: they provide warm light (colour temperature around 1,800–2,000K matches candlelight and wood fire), create movement and texture, and anchor a room's emotional centre without requiring cold structural systems.

Energy Efficiency & Operating Costs

The cost comparison between electric and gas fireplaces fundamentally changes capital and operating budgets for hotel developers.

Installation costs for electric fireplaces range from $150 to $300 total—essentially labour to mount the unit and run electrical supply. Installation for gas fireplaces, by contrast, requires licensed gas fitters, ventilation ducting, structural engineering (if venting through exterior walls), and often mechanical system integration. Gas fireplace installation typically runs $7,200 to $16,200. Over the life of a property, this 50-fold difference in installation cost transforms feasibility. A hotel adding fireplaces to 50 rooms saves $340,000 to $800,000 in installation expense alone by choosing electric over gas.

Annual operating costs are equally dramatic. An electric fireplace running 8 hours per day, 365 days per year in flame-only mode (50–150W) costs $80 to $131 annually. A gas fireplace operating under the same schedule costs $412 to $2,708 per year depending on fuel prices and burner efficiency. For a hotel running 100 fireplaces, the annual savings over gas amount to at least $28,100—based on the conservative estimates of $412/year for gas versus $131/year for electric per unit.

Electric fireplaces convert 100% of input power to light and heat (when heating mode is active). Gas fireplaces achieve 70% to 90% efficiency; the remainder vents as waste heat. This efficiency difference becomes pronounced in heating-required climates and vanishes in flame-only ambience scenarios. For a hospitality venue, the choice between heating and ambience-only mode can be made per zone, per season, and per room type.

Multi-Unit & Specification Workflow

Hotels and commercial properties often specify fireplaces across multiple properties or multiple rooms within a single property. EcoSmart Fire operates a dedicated commercial and hospitality program to support this workflow.

The programme provides architectural specification support, CAD files, and bulk-order pricing for projects specifying 10+ units. Designers and hotel procurement teams work with a dedicated account team that understands commercial timelines, code compliance requirements, and the need for consistent product across property portfolios. Project managers can access spec sheets, dimensional drawings, and technical documentation before purchase. Sample units are available for site evaluation.

For multi-property hotel groups, the programme simplifies procurement by consolidating orders, managing lead times, and ensuring consistent product experience across locations. A 150-room property specifying 30 electric fireplaces (penthouses, suites, public spaces) moves through design approval, specification, ordering, and installation on a predictable timeline—a process that would take months with gas systems.

Real-World Hotel Installations

EcoSmart Fire's installed base includes some of hospitality's most discerning properties.

The Wyndham Grand London Chelsea Harbour, a prestigious five-star all-suite hotel overlooking the Thames, specified electric fireplaces for penthouse suites where gas infrastructure simply did not exist. The alternative—leaving those premium rooms without a signature fireplace feature—was unacceptable. Electric fireplaces made the rooms distinctive and added measurable guest satisfaction uplift without structural modifications or months of regulatory delay. These are spaces marketed at premium rates, and the fireplace became part of the storytelling.

The May Fair Bar, voted one of London's best hotel bars and frequented by design-conscious clientele, integrates electric flame technology to create intimate corner zones without the need for visible venting or burner apparatus. Guests experience warmth and flicker without perceiving infrastructure—a hallmark of luxury hospitality design.

These aren't one-off pilot projects. They represent a category shift: luxury hospitality leaders now expect electric fireplaces as a viable, code-compliant alternative to gas systems, especially in constrained spaces, high-rise buildings, and venues where speed to market matters.

Getting Started — Specifying EcoSmart for Your Property

If you're designing or renovating a hotel, restaurant, spa, or commercial venue, the path to integrating electric fireplaces is straightforward.

Start by reviewing the full electric fireplaces range to identify formats suited to your spaces. Penthouses and grand suites typically call for the larger Motion models; guest rooms and intimate spaces favour Motion 52 or Motion 60; architectural integration suits the Switch FX line. Most properties end up with a mix across different room types.

Next, engage with EcoSmart Fire's commercial and hospitality programme. You'll connect with a dedicated account team who can provide specification sheets, CAD drawings, sample units for site evaluation, and bulk-order pricing. They understand hotel timelines, code compliance, and multi-property rollouts. The programme is designed to make procurement and specification as smooth as residential ordering but with enterprise-scale support.

Building inspectors and compliance teams will want to see UL or ETL listings and any CE documentation (if international). EcoSmart Fire's certifications are on file and available for review. Because there is no flame, no gas, and no venting, most of the typical fireplace safety approvals fall away entirely. Your electrician handles the final installation—a straightforward task that adds no months to your project timeline.

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