Applying a cost-effective process with a simple one-side-heating furnace, two layers of YBa2Cu3Ox (YBCO) bulks were successfully grown in one batch by using NdBa2Cu3Ox (NdBCO) thin-film-seeds deposited on MgO substrates. Due to the large temperature difference between the two layers, the seed-induced growth began at the bottom layer much later than that at the top layer. Remarkably, NdBCO films on the bottom layer samples survived a long time (over 15 h) above the growth temperature and effectively induced the YBCO growth. The significant thermal stability of the films, i.e., the tolerance for a long holding time on the surface of the molten pellet, is supposed to relate to a competition between the dissolution/diffusion of film materials into the liquid and NdBCO grain coarsening/Nd-YBCO crystallization.