Press Release Summary = Everyone hates stone cladding, and while the 80\'s are coming back into fashion, thats not the case for houses. If you want an ideal home, stay away from this method!
Press Release Body = Stone cladding can cause problems by trapping moisture within the walls of a house instead of allowing it to \"breathe\", but removing it is a difficult job and best left to professionals.
The team or the builder who would remove it, would probably erect scaffolding and may even board up windows, then - starting from the top - will smash off a piece of cladding with a hammer. Then the builder has to chisel under the remaining pieces, taking each piece off one by one.
The brick beneath will invariably suffer and removing stone cladding can take the original mortar joints and even the faces of the bricks or blocks off. It them may also be discovered that the cladding was applied to conceal or hide more serious problems such as major cracks and subsidence. The surface left after stone cladding removal may need a lot of work to get it up to scratch, maybe even sandblasting or shot blasting, and in more serious cases, the home owner may also have to get the exterior re rendered and then painted, or they may have to purchase a specialist wallcoating.
It\'s unlikely you can restore the wall to it\'s original state\" says Guy Bell of NEVER PAINT AGAIN uk, specialists in, amongst other things, stone cladding removal, \"so it\'s best to put up another surface onto the wall that is in keeping with the character of the house\"
As a rule of thumb, removing stone cladding can be a costly and expensive business and frustrating too, that time and effort has to be spent having to undo what was essentially a fad or fashion in the 1980s. Stone cladding is still used today in many different forms, but mainly as a feature, such as a window head or quoins (the corner stones on house edges), but rarely does a house being totally covered in stone cladding appear like as in previous years, people perhaps have more taste nowadays!
Another issue is quite a paradox. If the original cladding was installed by cowboy builders, it is far more likely to be easier to remove than if it was applied to the exterior walls of the house by professionals!
Also what does one do with the leftover rubble? Rather than take it to the landfill site, or pay for someone to remove it, some stone cladding pieces could be put to better use as decorative walling or edging in the back yard or garden!
There are many ways that the home owner can save both the environment and their wallet by simply using their head!
What is stone cladding?
For people who don\'t know, a definition in archinet, a great architects directory, suggests that: Stone cladding can be used internally and externally. Internally, stone cladding tiles can be directly fixed to internal walls with adhesive. Externally, stone cladding is normally attached with stainless steel fixings; there are also proprietary stone cladding rainscreen systems, which typically attach stone cladding panels to extruded aluminium mullions fixed to the main structure. With stone cladding rainscreen systems, any moisture penetrating the front seal is drained and expelled through weep holes in the stone cladding.
Another form of stone cladding takes the form of a thin layer of natural stone bonded to the exterior of a concrete panel; this produces the effect of stone cladding while economising on material.
The materials used for stone cladding can include marble, granite, sandstone, limestone and slate.
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Contact Details = Guy Alexander Bell (no i didnt invent the telephone!) is the english editor of the paint and coatings website \"Never Paint Again\". The site gets 7 million hits per year and is visited by around a quarter of a million people every year. NPA acepts submitted articles too so please visit our site and take a look around. If its paint you need, NPA is here for you. www.neverpaintagain.co.uk