When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: cost of bricks per square foot by zip code

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. How Much Homes Cost in the 10 Most Expensive ZIP Codes - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/see-much-homes-cost-america...

    Although the overall housing market is cooling, home prices remain high in many places -- and especially in the most expensive ZIP codes in the country. Among the 100 most expensive ZIP codes in ...

  3. Upper East Side - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upper_East_Side

    The Upper East Side maintains the highest pricing per square foot in the United States. A 2002 report cited the average cost per square meter as $8,856; however, that price has noticed a substantial jump, increasing to almost as much as $11,200 per square meter as of 2006. There are some buildings which cost about $125 per square foot (~$1345 ...

  4. Monadnock Building - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monadnock_Building

    The average cost of the restoration work was $1 million per floor ($2.46 million in 2023 dollars) in 1989, or $47 per square foot ($506 per square meter). [ 16 ] [ 76 ] Donnell's goal was that the Monadnock would "not only look as it originally did, it [would] also live as it used to", [ 77 ] and he sought tenants for the street-level shops ...

  5. Chicago common brick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago_common_brick

    The use of brick construction increased in Chicago after the Great Chicago fire of 1871. They are called common brick since they were used in multiwythe mass walls with many of the brick used on inner wythes while a facing brick was used for the outer wythe. Most of the brick manufacturers closed around the middle of the 20th century, and now ...

  6. Brickwork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brickwork

    A "face brick" is a higher-quality brick, designed for use in visible external surfaces in face-work, as opposed to a "filler brick" for internal parts of the wall, or where the surface is to be covered with stucco or a similar coating, or where the filler bricks will be concealed by other bricks (in structures more than two bricks thick).

  7. Empire State Building - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empire_State_Building

    The structural steel was pre-ordered and pre-fabricated in anticipation of a revision to the city's building code that would have allowed the Empire State Building's structural steel to carry 18,000 pounds per square inch (120,000 kPa), up from 16,000 pounds per square inch (110,000 kPa), thus reducing the amount of steel needed for the building.