Your old brick home is located in one of the historic neighborhoods in Washington DC. Preserving the unique architectural and design features of your dwelling maintains the desirability of that neighborhood. One necessary and visible maintenance chore is brick restoration and repair.
Historic brick homes require a special type of tuckpointing for restoration and repair. Homeowners should be familiar with the specifics of the process and the materials used.
Tuckpointing—or “repointing,”—describes the restoration of historic brick buildings by removing mortar between masonry joints and replacing it with lime-based mortar. This term applies to restoration work on both building facades and chimneys.
Lime, a stone used in construction for centuries, is the core ingredient in historic mortar. Its composition, texture, and strength/level of "hardness" are entirely different from cement or concrete, which are modern building materials suited for new construction.
If a historic building is repointed with cement, the material's extreme density - its level of hardness - will cause the softer coal-fired bricks to crack. If a historic building is not appropriately tuckpointed, it will eventually show signs of structural damage and interior water penetration.
There is a recommended method for tuckpointing historic brick buildings based on extensive research, physical/scientific evidence, and hands-on experience working with the structures themselves:
After decades of exposure, the mortar joints between the bricks on historic homes begin to fail. Because of the era in which so many houses were built in Washington DC, brick restoration in these historic buildings should be trusted to masonry contractors who are specialists in the correct application of traditional materials and methods.
Renaissance Development, a leader in brick restoration and historic preservation, specializes in the restoration of a historic brick building’s mortar joints using traditional methods (tuckpointing) and materials. Contact us for a free site visit and project quote.