13. ^ Charles F.Mitchell. Building Construction. Part 1. First Stage or Elementary Course. Second Edition—Revised. Published by B.T. Batsford, 52 High Holborn. 1889.
Page 22.
14. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica. 1911. BRICKWORK. “[...] portions of a brick [...] a half header in width, [...] are called queen closers[.]”
15. ^ Charles F.Mitchell. Building Construction. Part 1. First Stage or Elementary Course. Second Edition—Revised. Published by B.T. Batsford, 52 High Holborn. 1889.
Page 18. “King Closers are bricks cut so that one end is half the width of a brick, and [are] used in positions where the greater width at back would add strength to the
bond[...].”
16. ^ Peter Nicholson, Practical Masonry Bricklaying and Plastering. Published by Thomas Kelly, Paternoster Row, London. 1841. Page 167. “[...] an arrangement, or
combination of bricks when laid upon each other, [such] that the perpendicular joint formed by any two adjacent bricks may, at all times, be covered by the centre (or
nearly so) of one laid immediately over the joint, by which means the nearest approximation to solidity will be attained that such materials are capable of producing.”
17. ^ Peter Nicholson. The New Practical Builder, and Workman’s Companion. First edition. Published by Thomas Kelly, 17 Paternoster Row, London. 1823. Page 347.
“BRICKS ARE LAID in a varied, but regular, form of connection, or Bond, as exhibited in Plate LXXXV.”
18. ^ Nicholson: The New Practical Builder, and Workman’s Companion. Thomas Kelly, 17 Paternoster Row, London. 1823. Page 329. “BOND.—That regular
connection, in lapping the stones upon one another, when carrying up the work, which forms an inseparable mass of building.”
19. ^ Denzil Nield. Walls & Wall Facings. Spon, London. 1949. Page 145. “Cavity walls... are being increasingly built with hollow blocks or other material in place of
bricks for the internal leaf.”
20. ^ New Civil Engineer. Oct 3rd, 1991. Thomas Telford Ltd. London. Advertisement. “Single leaf wall with vertical and lateral load.”
21. ^ Barry’s Introduction to Construction of Buildings. Second Edition. 2010. Stephen Emmitt and Christopher A. Gorse. Wiley-Blackwell, John Wiley & Sons Ltd., The
Atrium, Southern Gate, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 8SQ. isbn 9781405188548. Page 7
22. ^ Barry’s Introduction to Construction of Buildings. Second Edition. 2010. Stephen Emmitt and Christopher A. Gorse. Wiley-Blackwell, John Wiley & Sons Ltd., The
Atrium, Southern Gate, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 8SQ. isbn 9781405188548. Pages 232, 233. “Early cavity walls were constructed with bonding bricks laid
across the cavity at internals to tie the two leaves together. [...] Later, iron ties were used to tie the two leaves together.”
23. ^ David Yeomans. Construction Since 1900: Materials. BT Batsford Ltd, 583 Fulham Road, London, SW6 5BY. 1997. isbn 0713466847. Page 60. “In 1974, a large
section of the outer leaf of a wall of a comprehensive school at Newnham collapsed revealing a complete absence of ties over a considerable area [and] in 1983, a
much larger section of a wall at Plymouth Polytechnic collapsed due to corrosion of the cavity ties.”
24. ^ CITB
CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY TRAINING BOARD
Training Workbook
Setting Out Brickwork
Positioning Ranging Lines, Gauge, Dry Bonding, Broken Bonding
WB 272
Construction Industry Training Board, Bircham Newton, Kings Lynn, Norfolk PE31 6RH. 1994. isbn185751095X. Page 35-37. “Wall thickness terms relate to a
stretcher dimension of a brick. Wall (A) [pictured] is termed a half brick wall. Wall (B) [pictured] is termed a one brick wall [...]. This wall is a half brick thick
wall [...]. This wall is a one brick thick wall [...].”
25. ^ Bricks and Brickwork. Cecil C. Handisyde and Barry A. Haseltine. The Brick Development Association. 19 Grafton Street, London, W1X 3LE. 1974. Page 68. “Old
buildings of solid wall construction were accepted as ‘waterproof’, often when brickwork was only 9 inches thick. Now it is generally agreed that solid walls of less
than [one and a half] brick thickness are inadequate. Code of Practice 121 still includes unrendered one brick thick walls as acceptable for sheltered positions but this
seems a questionable recommendation. Walling of [one and a half] brick thickness should be satisfactory for sheltered positions and may be adequate for moderate
exposure.”
26. ^ Barry’s Introduction to Construction of Buildings. Second Edition. 2010. Stephen Emmitt and Christopher A. Gorse. Wiley-Blackwell, John Wiley & Sons Ltd., The
Atrium, Southern Gate, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 8SQ. isbn 9781405188548. Page 206. “In exposed positions such as high ground and near the coast, a wall
2B thick may be needed to resist penetration to inside faces [...]. In positions of very severe exposure to wind-driven rain, as on high open ground facing the prevailing
wind and on the coast facing open sea, it is necessary to protect both solid and cavity walls with an external cladding.”
27. ^ Fuller, Chicago Tribune, December 7, 1958.
28. ^ A. C. Smeaton. The Builder’s Pocket Manual; Containing the Elements of Building, Surveying and Architecture; with Practical Rules and Instructions in Carpentry,
Bricklaying, Masonry &c. Published by M. Taylor, Barnard’s Inn, Holborn. 1837. Page 29, 30. “The two principal methods of bricklaying are severally called English
and Flemish bond. [...] Flemish bond consists in placing a header and a stretcher alternately throughout every course.”
29. ^ R.W. Brunskill. Brick Building in Britain. Victor Gollancz (Publisher) in association with Peter Crawley. An imprint of the Cassell Group. Wellington House,
125 Strand, London WC2R 0BB. 1997. isbn 0575065354. Page 57, 58.
30. ^ The Architectural Review. May 1936. The Architectural Press. 9 Queen Anne’s Gate, Westminster, S.W.1. London. Page 233.
31. ^ R.W. Brunskill. Brick Building in Britain. Victor Gollancz (Publisher) in association with Peter Crawley. An imprint of the Cassell Group. Wellington House, 125
Strand, London WC2R 0BB. 1997. isbn 0575065354. Page 91. “SINGLE FLEMISH BOND: gives the appearance of Flemish Bond on the outside face only of a wall
more than 9 inches thick. The same appearance on both inner and outer faces is given by DOUBLE FLEMISH BOND.”
32. ^ Peter Nicholson, Practical Masonry Bricklaying and Plastering. Published by Thomas Kelly, Paternoster Row, London. 1841. Page 102. “[...] the bricks are disposed
alike on both sides of the wall, the tail of the headers being placed contiguous to each other, so as to form square spaces in the core of the wall for half-bricks.”
33. ^ Charles F.Mitchell. Building Construction. Part 1. First Stage or Elementary Course. Second Edition—Revised. Published by B.T. Batsford, 52 High Holborn. 1889.
Page 25, figures 37 & 38.
34. ^
a
b
The Dictionary of Art. Grove. Volume Four, Biardeau TO Brüggemann. Edited by Jane Turner. Macmillan Publishers Limited. 1996. isbn 1884446000. Page 769.
35. ^ The Architectural Review. May 1936. The Architectural Press. 9 Queen Anne’s Gate, Westminster, S.W.1. London. Page 242. THE BONDING OF BRICKWORK.
P.M. Stratton. “An extra cost over Flemish has to be met for labour on Monk bond and its derivatives, because the process is not so straightforward as Flemish, and
the bricklayers have to stop and think more frequently.”
36. ^ The Architectural Review. May 1936. The Architectural Press. 9 Queen Anne’s Gate, Westminster, S.W.1. London. Page 241. THE BONDING OF BRICKWORK.
P.M. Stratton. “Monk bond [...] is popular in the North of Europe. Two stretchers are followed by one header in every course, the headers being so disposed that
verticality of their axial lines is little apparent, and a striking result is obtained of diagonal lines of stretchers, which look like a series of corbels or cantilevers embedded
in the wall.”
37. ^ A History of English Brickwork. Nathaniel Lloyd. First Published in 1925. Published by The Antique Collectors’ Club Ltd, 2003. isbn 0907462367. Page 440.
“FLEMISH GARDEN WALL or SUSSEX BOND. Three stretchers, then one header in every course.”
38. ^ The Architectural Review. May 1936. The Architectural Press. 9 Queen Anne’s Gate, Westminster, S.W.1. London. Page 241. THE BONDING OF BRICKWORK.
P.M. Stratton.
39. ^ Charles F.Mitchell. Building Construction. Part 1. First Stage or Elementary Course. Second Edition—Revised. Published by B.T. Batsford, 52 High Holborn. 1889.
Page 23.
40. ^ A. C. Smeaton. The Builder’s Pocket Manual; Containing the Elements of Building, Surveying and Architecture; with Practical Rules and Instructions in Carpentry,
Bricklaying, Masonry &c. Published by M. Taylor, Barnard’s Inn, Holborn. 1837. Page 29, 30. “The two principal methods of bricklaying are severally called English
and Flemish bond .... English bond consists of alternating courses of headers and stretchers; thus, one course is formed with headers, that is, with bricks crossing the