My only concern is, is brick and mortar construction the same today as it was ~100yrs ago?
My first two homes were built in the early/mid 1950s and were all brick. 50+ years later, all the mortar joints were original, no cracking. I never had to do a thing with the brick exterior.
The only issue was, these homes were poorly insulated and on hot summer days, those heat soaked bricks would really heat the house up towards the evening, into the night.
My current home is partial brick from ~1970. It's all original.
Personally I like how maintenance free they are relatively speaking.
I'm in a high wind area and they don't keep you up all night thinking they're going to blow apart like vinyl siding etc. No painting like stucco etc.
Topped off with a heavy guage metal roof and you have a winner. I prefer mine as a single story with a full basement. How about you ?
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$700k?My niece in Germany is right now building this house /
Once it's done in a few months the total will be .... what's your guess?
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My niece in Germany is right now building this house /
Once it's done in a few months the total will be .... what's your guess?
View attachment 211336
What I've seen with brick today is insufficient air gap between the brick and sheathing/wrb. I've also seen where mortor is bridging the gap between the brick and sheathing. That's a no-no as far as keeping the walls dry.My only concern is, is brick and mortar construction the same today as it was ~100yrs ago?
My first two homes were built in the early/mid 1950s and were all brick. 50+ years later, all the mortar joints were original, no cracking. I never had to do a thing with the brick exterior.
The only issue was, these homes were poorly insulated and on hot summer days, those heat soaked bricks would really heat the house up towards the evening, into the night.
My current home is partial brick from ~1970. It's all original.
My only concern is, is brick and mortar construction the same today as it was ~100yrs ago?
My first two homes were built in the early/mid 1950s and were all brick. 50+ years later, all the mortar joints were original, no cracking. I never had to do a thing with the brick exterior.
The only issue was, these homes were poorly insulated and on hot summer days, those heat soaked bricks would really heat the house up towards the evening, into the night.
My current home is partial brick from ~1970. It's all original.
2"x4" wall framing.how thick were those all brick walls? My grandparents had an all brick farm, but the walls were about 2ft thick
Yes plsPersonally I like how maintenance free they are relatively speaking.
I'm in a high wind area and they don't keep you up all night thinking they're going to blow apart like vinyl siding etc. No painting like stucco etc.
Topped off with a heavy guage metal roof and you have a winner. I prefer mine as a single story with a full basement. How about you ?
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Yup I totally agree.I love our brick veneer, my only regret is not going all the way up on the gable end. 105 wood has to be replaced when it rots and cleaned every few years and repainted.
Brick buildings may not be suitable or even allowed given the location.I’d be worried about the ground shifting, causing cracks.
There are different types of bricks made of various materials, solid, hollow, in various sizes, and with different thermal properties. Insulating materials like Styrofoam sheets and spray able, expandable foam, and soft foam blocks are used for additional insulation. The outside of a brick building is often covered with roughcast. Brick buildings can be very well insulated, certainly better than something stick- built.And how does insulation work with that? is the interior still sheetrock and all, just the exterior is brick?