Chapter 6 Bricks
Chapter 6 Bricks
BRICKS
INTRODUCTION
Building B
Building A
INTRODUCTION
1. Solid – no holes
Perforated – holes
2. exceed 25% of gross
volume of the brick
Introduction
No. Shape Figures
Closer brick
a) Queen Closer
• A brick which has been cut over its length and is a
stretcher long and a quarter bat deep.
• Commonly used to bond on brick walls at right
angled quoins.
b) King Closer
• A brick which has been cut diagonally over its
length to show a half bat at one end and
nothing at the other.
b) Half Bricks
• Used for end joints to
avoid vertical straight
joint.
Movement joints in brickwork
• Movement joints should be formed where
required by the design
• Necessary in long lengths of walling to reduce
unsightly cracking
• Joints are often hidden in corners or behind
rainwater pipes
• Not needed in internal walls & partitions
Types of brick movement joints in
brickwork
a) Lateral/Horizontal Joints
• Horizontal movement joints are formed by,
and located at, shelf angles.
• Usually specified once the building height
reaches three or four stories.
• Lateral or horizontal joints usually used for
Head bond, Side or Stretcher Bond, English
Bond and Flemish Bond.
b) Vertical Joints
• Vertical movement joints span masonry panels
vertically (both structural and veneer).
• When selecting vertical movement joint
locations, the primary consideration should be
the location of large openings where stress
concentrations can be expected to occur. E.g :
changes in wall height, changes in wall
thickness, corners, offsets and wall
intersections.
Vertical
Horizontal Joints
Joints
c) Lapped Joints
• Lapped joint is the
horizontal distance to
copy brick structure at
the top of the brick
underneath.
• The bricks are usually tied
by plastering it in ¼ brick
or ½ brick.
• These types of joint have
been seen in L or T wall.
d) Quoins
• Quoins are the cornerstones of brick.
• Quoins may be either structural or decorative.
• Architects and builders use quoins to give the
impression of strength and firmness to the
outline of a building.
• Quoining can be carried out in stone on a stone
building, with stone on a predominantly brick
building, or by laying brick masonry to give the
appearance of blocks at the corner.
• If structural, quoins are usually part of load-
bearing walls; if decorative, they may be made of
a variety of materials including brick, stone and
wood.
Different types of Quoins & purposes
e) Toothing
• In leaving a section of brickwork so that
subsequent work can be bonded into it, the end
is finished in what is known as "toothing."
• Toothing is a vertical break in the wall but with
alternate courses left projecting a sufficient
distance to assure good bond with the portion
to be afterward built, this end thus presenting a
tooth like appearance.
• The purpose of toothing is to allow for plumbing
to be taking higher than a racking would
normally allow.
• Toothing should be avoided wherever possible;
it is difficult to construct the new portion.
Toothing in brickwork
f) Racking
• Racking back and stop end is commonly used
by bricklayers to build plumbing which allow
them to plumb either end of the wall & build a
line in the middle of the wall.
Terminologies in brick lying
The Main Principles in Brickwork
There are two (2) main
principles in brickwork;
i. An arrangement in brick
bond must have lapped (lekap)
¼ brick or ½ brick to prevent
vertical straight joint on the
surface or in wall.
ii. According to the type of
brick bond that had been set by
designer to ensure wall stability
that built and maintain design
arts.
Types of Bond in Brickworks
STRETCHER BOND
Types of Bond in Brickworks
ENGLISH BOND
Types of Bond in Brickworks
HEADER BOND
Types of Bond in Brickworks
FLEMISH BOND
Mortar jointing and pointing
Mortar jointing and pointing
Definition:
• The jointer work (jointing) which have been
made during plastering brickwork when
mortar still wet. In this work, the brick is
arranged and bound until single brick layer
were completed, then the brick bond is
trimmed.
• The term used for ‘finishing off’ mortar joints,
of the brickwork, before the mortar hardens.
(as the work proceeds)
Mortar jointing and pointing
• The main purpose of any joint finishing is to
improve the wall’s resistance to rain or the
ingress of water through the joint, as well as
enhancing the appearance of the wall.
• If joints are simply cut to the face of the brick and
not finished, shallow cracks will develop
immediately between the brick and the mortar.
• This is achieved by packing mortar into the joints
so that it has close contact with surface of the
brickwork.
• Jointing up brickwork is a critical part of building
face work, and it should not be hurried.
Mortar jointing and pointing
There is five (5) types of joint finishes:
• Flush Joint
• Weather Joint
• Struck Joint
• Raked Joint
• Half Tooled @ Concaved @ Keyed Joint
• ‘V’ Joint
FLUSH JOINT
• Flush joints are achieved by cleaning off
excess surface mortar close to the surface of
the brickwork and then, later on, brushing the
surface with a light bristle brush to remove
any crumbs.
WEATHERED JOINT
• A weather struck joint is formed using a pointing
trowel. The joint has a surface, which slopes from
the top to the bottom (downwards) of the brick
so that water can run off the surface of the joint.
STRUCK JOINT
• Mortar joint has a slope (upwards) edge.
RAKED JOINT
• Raked or square-recessed joints are joints
where the surface is a specified depth below
the surface of the brick.
• This is achieved by raking or scraping out the
joint material using a tool called a ‘Chariot’ or
an improvised depth gauge which is usually a
piece of timber with a nail inserted to the
depth required.
RAKED JOINT
CONCAVED JOINT
• achieved by scraping or ‘ironing in’ the joint to
form a concave or half-round joint.
• always joint into the main body of Brickwork.
• the cross joints should always be done first
and care is needed when finishing joints at
external angles.
CONCAVED JOINT
‘V’ JOINT
• Mortar joint is the form of ‘V’
Mortar jointing and pointing
• What is pointing?
• It is the art of finishing the mortar joints in
exposed brick or stone masonry with suitable
cement or lime mortar, in order to protect the
joints from weather effects and also to
improve the appearance of building structure.
• Pointing is a term used to describe the process
of finishing off joints that are raked out on the
day the brickwork is built. It is carried out
after the brickwork is complete.
POINTING
POINTING
JOINTING VS RAIN PENETRATION