110 likes | 464 Views
Solid walls - English Bond. Wall 1 brick thick. This is English Bond. Notice the headers in one course, stretchers in the next. The queen closer keeps the bond. Click (or wait) for next slide. English Bond examples.
E N D
Solid walls - English Bond Wall 1 brick thick This is English Bond. Notice the headers in one course, stretchers in the next. The queen closer keeps the bond. Click (or wait) for next slide
English Bond examples On the right there are two examples of English bond. The lower one shows very dense engineering bricks - often found in factories and bridges etc. Make sure you understand the need for the queen closers (left). Click (or wait) for next slide
English Bond - Garden Wall Bond English Bond is slow to lay. Work is quicker if the number of headers is reduced. This is why Garden wall bonds are so popular. On the right you should be able to see that there are three courses of stretchers to every one of headers…. The number of bricks is virtually the same -it’s just quicker to lay stretchers and fewer bricks are rejected if they are too long or too short. Click (or wait) for next slide
English Bond - Thick walls In most two storey houses the walls are 1B thick (approx. 225mm) High buildings need thicker walls. English Bond can easily be adapted. The right-hand picture shows two courses of a wall which is two-bricks thick. Click for next slide
Solid walls - Flemish Bond This is Flemish Bond. Notice the headers and stretchers alternate in each course. Again, the queen closers keeps the bond. Click (or wait) for next slide
Flemish Bond - examples Here are three examples of Flemish bond. Good quality housing from the Georgian and Victorian periods is usually in Flemish bond. Click (or wait) for next slide
Flemish Garden Wall bond Flemish Garden Wall bond is quite rare but it does exist. The example on the right shows two stretchers in each course followed by a single header. There are other variations. End of sequence