[Translate to English:] “Eines Morgens wachte ich auf und sah den Feuerring. Als sei er als geformter Meteorit vom Himmel gefallen, um auf Moos und Kies für immer zu bleiben.”

“Without a fire pit, the garden
remains merely a place of growth.”

[Translate to English:] Architektur, Kunst und Natur: Hier fühlt sich ein Feuerring wohl und brennt freudig auf. Umgeben von Bäumen und Kräutern. Beim Blick durch die Glasfront sieht der Feuerring-Besitzer die Skulptur.


One morning I woke up and saw the fire ring. It looked as if it had fallen from the sky like a meteorite, only to remain forever on the moss and gravel. Architecture, art, and nature. Surrounded by oak trees, rosemary, and moss. Here, the fire ring feels at home and burns brightly.

The Feuerring in garden design: sculpture, barbecue ring, and a place for culinary enjoyment and community


Are you planning your garden? Are you looking for garden ideas that go beyond the ordinary?

A fire ring is not a grill. Nor is it a fire bowl. Andreas Reichlin has created a unique design in Immensee. The fire ring is a garden sculpture, a steel sculpture—and at the same time a grilling ring for culinary moments. When you grill indirectly on it, you grill more healthily than on a traditional grill while gazing into the flames.

In modern garden design, a fire ring embodies the primal, the archaic: it creates a fire pit where people gather. It is a steel sculpture that connects architecture and nature. Whether in a garden, on a terrace, or in a courtyard: the fire ring brings structure. It provides warmth, draws people in, and remains as art in the garden long after the fire has gone out. It is an anchor point.


Harmoniously arranged at Le Rossignol: Old stone walls, with a fire pit and seating in front. Framed by lavender and climbing plants.

Which model is right for my garden? How do I find the perfect spot for my fire ring?

People often contact us and immediately ask for the Luna Grande. The giant. The monument. Once they’ve made up their minds, we deliver it. But we often pause for a moment. We ask: Where should the fire ring be placed?

A garden is a complex system. Plants, trees, and hedges take up space. No one wants competition among neighbors—or between art and nature. A well-thought-out garden design allows the overall composition to breathe. Sometimes a smaller plant fits in more modestly and creates a more harmonious effect when paired with an old oak tree or a delicate hedge.

Where does your garden fire burn most beautifully?

On the edge? A little hidden? Proudly in the center? Deep in the gravel or raised on the patio? How far away from the beech tree?

We don’t have any rigid rules for the perfect spot in the garden. We don’t use feng shui, and we don’t use a pendulum. We rely on our eyes and our intuition. We listen to you: Do you want to see the fire ring when you look out the window in the morning? Should it call out to you, or do you want to discover it only when you’re strolling through the garden?


Morning atmosphere with a Feuerring at Hofgut Hafnerleiten.

Let’s take a look together and decide

Show us your garden—via video call or with photos. We’ll get a feel for your space. We’ll advise you on your garden design so that the fire ring can truly shine: as a work of fire art that defines the space, and as a place where people love to gather. Experience the symbiosis of fire and art.

Come visit us at the Feuerring Atelier in Immensee. Touch the steel, light a Feuerring, and view all the models.

Get an overview of the Feuerring models and schedule a consultation.

How does the ring fit into your garden? Check out our videos on the IN MOTION page in the “My Fire Ring” category.

Schedule an appointment now for a personalized consultation
+41-41-8507058
infonoSpam@feuerring.ch


In the garden at Krautkopf in Prebberede, the Luna 50 basks in the tranquility, surrounded by the cubes, the steel frame for storing wood, a black pine, apple blossoms, and a hazelnut bush.