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Porto Series
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When the propane tank can't tuck behind a wall, an enclosure puts it in plain sight as a finished piece of patio hardscape.
Most propane fire features have a hidden tank compartment in the base. But fire pit kits, table-style burners, and built-in installations often need the tank to live outside the fire feature — usually within 6-10 feet, downwind, and accessible for swap. A bare 20 lb tank is unsightly; an enclosure makes it look intentional.
Prism Hardscapes builds enclosures from the same GFRC concrete they use for their fire bowls and tables — so the tank cover reads as a side table or planter rather than a utility cover.
Round enclosures (Mod 20", Orinda 15") work as accent pieces next to a chair. Square enclosures (Tav 20", Sausalito 16") sit cleanly against a wall or post. Coit is the largest, sized for a 30 lb tank or for hiding the tank plus a small accessory like a regulator.
Each enclosure ships in every Prism finish (Cafe, Coastal, Ebony, Natural, Pewter, Ultra White) so you can match the rest of the patio. The top lifts off for tank swaps; some models include an internal regulator clip.
Local code typically requires propane tanks to be at least 5 feet from a building opening, 10 feet from a deck stair, and outdoors only — check your jurisdiction. Place the enclosure in a level, ventilated location where you can reach in to swap the tank without moving the cover.
Don't paint or seal the GFRC — it's a finished surface designed to weather slowly. A light pressure-wash twice a year is all the maintenance needed.
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