Typically, the rowhouses in Baltimore are brick boxes. There are a few wood framed rowhouses still around the city - and we looked at one that was beautiful - but for the most part they're all brick. There was even a law at some point in the 1800's requiring the houses and buildings be constructed with brick because fires were much angrier then and entire cities would be destroyed in hours.
I like the fact that our 200 year old box is made of brick.
In most houses, the brick would be covered with plaster. In our case - and many others - drywall would be hung over the plaster. The drywall is typically the easy part. The plaster should have been outlawed along with the wooden houses. I've read some articles about how the plaster would fall off in large pieces. Our plaster holds on to the brick for dear life.
A few tips:
-Wear gloves, dust mask and safety glasses;
-Your brick might not be pretty - test an area to make sure it looks good;
-We used hammers, prybars, mallets and a good dose of elbow grease;
-A labradoodle could do this - DIY 100%.
We haven't committed to doing huge areas just yet. Here's what we have so far.
This is in what will be the living room:
In this area, rather than hanging the drywall on furring strips, it was glued to the plaster for added fun!
Eventually, the television will hang on the wall above the fireplace - oh my, I hate that wallpaper. Play Cornhole.
John McCain makes one angry.
Speaking of fires... do you think there may have been one in the basement at some point?
The next step is cleaning the brick, which creates an incredible amount of dust and sore biceps. More on that later.
Oh, and we have to do something about the dining room:
Meet Kanga and Jaxxon - renovations are exhausting, but plaster tastes delicious
5 comments:
Exposing brick is messy and time consuming, but extremely rewarding. The toughest part is getting rid of all the debris.
Best of luck with your renovations.
Hey, Thanks for the awesome posts! I am planning on exposing the brick on the 1st-2nd floor stairwell in Baltimore rowhome soon. Fortunately it seems as though it is just up against firring strips and the brick should be in pretty good condition. How did you deal with the gaps between where there was drywall and the new brick? Also how did you do the stairwell? I'm not sure how I'm going to get into that area! Any advice would be greatly appreciated!
Matt
Thanks, Matt!
We had the same questions you do. For the brick meeting the drywall - in some places we did nothing. If the gap is small and you can finish the edge of the drywall cleanly, it's not noticeable. In other areas we just filled the gap as good as possible with plaster or painters caulk - there may be quicker, better ways to do this, but with some patience and persistence you can get the line pretty clean.
For the stairs, we had to rebuild and retrim the gap between the stairs and the brick. The gap was about 3" and UGLY. We plan on adding a stairwell post about the whole job, but just haven't had a chance yet. So look back for some better pictures.
Where's your house? Are you blogging about it? A few of us other renovators hang out occasionally for a happy hour...
Hey,
Thanks for the suggestions. Im right in Patterson Park...across from the former Highlandtown Middle School, soon to be apartment rentals if Baltimore City gets their act together. I'm not blogging about it, because it was mostly redone a few years ago, but their are a few minor-mid scale projects I want to work on in the coming months, if I can get my act together. I would love to meet up for a beer for a happy hour or have some people over and let me know what you think. When/where do you guys go?
Great post thankyoou
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