When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: building brick walls designs ideas photos

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Polychrome brickwork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polychrome_brickwork

    Menier Chocolate Factory, Noisiel, France, 1872, a particularly elaborate example of polychrome brickwork. Polychrome brickwork is a style of architectural brickwork in which bricks of different colours are used to create decorative patterns or highlight architectural features in the walls of a building.

  3. Give Your Walls the Attention They Deserve with These Unique ...

    www.aol.com/walls-attention-deserve-unique-decor...

    From beautiful wallpaper to well-appointed gallery walls, here we give you 39 wall decor ideas to inspire what direction to take your empty wall. Among the photos you'll find below there's plenty ...

  4. Chrysler Building - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrysler_Building

    The new design was much more conservative, with an Italianate dome that a critic compared to Governor Al Smith's bowler hat, and a brick arrangement on the upper floors that simulated windows in the corners, a detail that remains in the current Chrysler Building. This design almost exactly reflected the shape, setbacks, and the layout of the ...

  5. Brickwork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brickwork

    A leaf is as thick as the width of one brick, but a wall is said to be one brick thick if it as wide as the length of a brick. Accordingly, a single-leaf wall is a half brick thickness; a wall with the simplest possible masonry transverse bond [definition needed] is said to be one brick thick, and so on. [21]

  6. Brick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brick

    A brick is a type of construction material used to build walls, pavements and other elements in masonry construction. Properly, the term brick denotes a unit primarily composed of clay , but is now also used informally to denote units made of other materials or other chemically cured construction blocks.

  7. Crinkle crankle wall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crinkle_crankle_wall

    Crinkle crankle wall in Bramfield, Suffolk. A crinkle crankle wall, also known as a crinkum crankum, sinusoidal, serpentine, ribbon or wavy wall, is an unusual type of structural or garden wall built in a serpentine shape with alternating curves, originally used in Ancient Egypt, but also typically found in Suffolk in England.

  8. Wythe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wythe

    A single wythe of brick that is not structural in nature is referred to as a masonry veneer. A multiple-wythe masonry wall may be composed of a single type of masonry unit layered to increase its thickness and structural strength, or different masonry units chosen by function, such as an economical concrete block serving a structural purpose ...

  9. Building material - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Building_material

    Successive courses being used to build up walls, arches, and other architectural elements. Fired brick walls are usually substantially thinner than cob/adobe while keeping the same vertical strength. They require more energy to create but are easier to transport and store, and are lighter than stone blocks.