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  2. Brickwork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brickwork

    A leaf is as thick as the width of one brick, but a wall is said to be one brick thick if it as wide as the length of a brick. Accordingly, a single-leaf wall is a half brick thickness; a wall with the simplest possible masonry transverse bond [definition needed] is said to be one brick thick, and so on. [21]

  3. 28 Porch Step Ideas to Dress Up Your House This Fall - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/30-diy-front-step-ideas...

    Here our best front porch step ideas for small and wide steps alike with pictures of modern and traditional designs. 28 Porch Step Ideas to Dress Up Your House This Fall Skip to main content

  4. Australian residential architectural styles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_residential...

    This style of house has a brick facade (exterior) with timber frames supporting interior walls, usually of gyprock. Roofs are always hipped or gabled and tiled. As mentioned previously in this article, this style, without the painted and rendered brick facade, dominated suburban architecture in the 1950s – 1960s.

  5. Unreinforced masonry building - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unreinforced_masonry_building

    An unreinforced masonry building (or UMB, URM building) is a type of building where load bearing walls, non-load bearing walls or other structures, such as chimneys, are made of brick, cinderblock, tiles, adobe or other masonry material that is not braced by reinforcing material, such as rebar in a concrete or cinderblock. [1]

  6. Cavity wall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cavity_wall

    Components on a concrete masonry unit and brick cavity wall. A cavity wall is composed of two masonry walls separated by an air space. The outer wall is made of brick and faces the outside of the building structure. [6] The inner wall may be constructed of masonry units such as concrete block, structural clay, brick or reinforced concrete. [6]

  7. Timber framing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timber_framing

    These interior posts typically carry more structural load than the posts in the exterior walls. This is the same concept of the aisle in church buildings, sometimes called a hall church , where the center aisle is technically called a nave .

  8. Benjamin Stephenson House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Stephenson_House

    The interior and exterior walls are of three course thick brick; the bricks were manufactured on site by Benjamin Stephenson's indentured servants. [4] The exterior is composed of at least 100,000 bricks, all of which were made on the Stephenson House property. [9]

  9. External wall insulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/External_wall_insulation

    Types of External cromatic wall insulation systems (EWI Systems pictured above) External wall insulation systems generally comprise firstly an insulation layer (an element which helps to achieve the requisite thermal performance); and secondly,a protected weatherproof finish (usually a render, although brick slips, [3] tiles, and decorative boards can also be used).