Removing stone cladding

End to end

What we did:

  1. Remove the stone cladding
  2. Replace the uPVC windows with wooden sash windows
  3. Replace the upVC white door with a new composite door
  4. Grind off the top layer of bricks to reveal the original London yellow brick underneath
  5. Pointing of all the joints
  6. Remove the rendered / painted archway walls
  7. Repair underlying damage

How it started

Our Victorian terrace was covered in ‘colourful’ yellow, red and blue (?!) stone cladding which someone in the 70s or 80s had, for some reason known only to themselves, thought was a good idea.

It was so ugly that the online photos to sell the property did not include a photo of the front of the house AT ALL. This is what it looked like after we’d just started stripping them back and realised we should have taken a photo of what it looked like beforehand:

The 70s mash up

What we did

We started by picking the blocks off using a hammer and chisel and dropping the bits into a bucket. In some areas, particularly near the top of the house, they came off worryingly easily meaning they weren’t very well attached in the first place and people walking under them were risking being hit by falling debris before we started so removing them was a safety thing if nothing else!

We were concerned as we knew that the facia can be either 1. a fashion thing or 2. to hide problems with the brickwork so we were relieved when it turned out this was a fashion mistake.

Using a bucket to collect the debris

 

Slabs removed

The next stages were:

    1. Replace the cheap and nasty uPVC windows with wooden sash windows.
    2. Replace the cheap and nasty uPWC door with a composite blue door.
New windows and door

The next activity was to sort out the brickwork and bring it back to its original yellow London brick glory.

We hired someone to restore the brickwork to the original and take the 100 years of soot and grime out. He then used weather pointing, which means the mortar joint is slightly recessed and the top and protrudes at the bottom, directing away from the brick face and creating a slope. This directs water away from the joint and provides better protection than a lot of the standard pointing you can see on restored houses where the pointing is recessed.

Arches

The arches looked okish but were cheaply painted and badly done so we agreed to remove the paint and restore this brickwork too.

The doorway as we found it

This involved stripping back the badly done paintwork on the arches to see what damage was underneath. There were some knocks in the brickwork which must have taken a beating at some point but on the whole not too bad considering the rest of the house.

End of the process

Other work not described here:

  1. Replacement of the (original Victorian) bay window roof
  2. Replacement of guttering system
  3. Repairing and painting the Victorian columns, cills, arch roof etc.
  4. Fixing a hole in the top right which led right into the loft cavity

Conclusion

We definitely feel this was worth the time and effort as the house (we think) looks a million times better. It’s also better protected against the weather and more natural as the house was meant to be i.e. the brickwork can ‘breathe’. Would definitely recommend a professional, it was far quicker having a brickie who specialised in this work.

Original house – Removing stone cladding

There’s something to be said about being one of the worst looking houses on the street because of the monstrosities of the 1970s and 80s and it isn’t anything good. Apparently these heavy blocks were stuck on to the front of the beautiful brickwork to make the house look more like a countryside Cotswold abode. Honestly.. what. Turns out, not only has it not aged well, it can be the cause of damp as the bricks cannot ‘breathe’ and moisture gets trapped between the walls.

We were quite cautious about removing it as it’s difficult to see what damage attaching the stone has caused to the underlying brickwork and it is known to cover a range of problems… after taking advice from a specialist that we would be ok to have a look, we used a hammer and chisel to pull off a number of lower level stones to look at the condition underneath:

Pulling off the cladding revealed either the blackened exterior from many decades of pollution build up or in some places, a beautiful yellow which is the original colour of the brickwork but meant that the glue bonding the stones on had pulled off the front of the bricks. We decided to proceed, with caution and see what happened.

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