This makes sense and may explain why almost every brick house in my neighborhood (full, 1952) has vinyl siding. Usually the people who show up to repoint don't seem to be very good at it. My own experience is I had the chimney repointed twice. I also know that $300 to go up on the roof when it's 90F isn't a lot of money, and seems I got what I paid for, another job needed in 4 years.Brick is preferred. The lack of truly skilled tradesmen in the construction segment though is unfortunate and brick veneer houses crack. Those built 40-50-60 years ago didn’t. They understood proper footings etc.. Sure homes under construction are supposed to meet code but the lazy inspectors let things go and homes built in the last 10-20 years ago to present will have problems. My home built in 2001 was an example. The chimney separated from the wall after 5 years along with a major crack along that bricked wall. My “10 year structural warranty” applied. They sent a non English speaking kid with a ladder and several tubes of caulk to “repair”. Needles to say the battle ensued….
Very big with ranch houses here in the 60s on up and most houses here have brick fronts as it most likely is a cost issue.Are other homes brick in area. They are odd and generally not attractive (new) in New England area.
Is this actual brick or just brick-looking siding?Another blend...
View attachment 211367
That is stone veneer on that house.Is this actual brick or just brick-looking siding?
There is a builder in Florida that uses vinyl with no osb or plywood behind it. Only a cheap bogus wrap...We have stone veneer and aluminum siding on our house. I know there is no exterior sheeting behind the siding, and it bothers me. You can hear the house creek & crack in high winds. So when I would go insulated vinyl siding I would want exterior sheeting put up, then the house wrapped, then insulated vinyl siding.
What I don't want is the cost.![]()