I would have extended the existing wall (with bricks recovered from elsewhere - presumably there's some kind of knockthrough) to butt up to the new wall and tied together with wall ties. Get rid of that horrible return made with the new bricks and hide the join in the corner.
I would have extended the existing wall (with bricks recovered from elsewhere - presumably there's some kind of knockthrough) to butt up to the new wall and tied together with wall ties. Get rid of that horrible return made with the new bricks and hide the join in the corner.
It would have weakened that corner and provided little in structural or aesthetic gain. Butted with a wall starter is fine and strong enough. The main fault is the builders insistence in trying to keep up with the ridiculous existing joints. He should have set out in metric and gained an extra course on the house. That small return should have been about 10-15mm less when setting out.
It would have weakened that corner and provided little in structural or aesthetic gain. Butted with a wall starter is fine and strong enough. The main fault is the builders insistence in trying to keep up with the ridiculous existing joints. He should have set out in metric and gained an extra course on the house. That small return should have been about 10-15mm less when setting out.
I thought toothing in was frowned upon now as the movement of the extension is likely to be different to that of the original house, causing toothing in to create a stress point resulting in cracking? Or am I talking nonsense?
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