[HPFGU-OTChatter] Re:Brick Houses (was: Rupert! What were you thinking?
Donna
donnawonna at woh.rr.com
Mon Oct 12 22:57:03 UTC 2009
Donna:
Being the proud owner of a stucco house in Dayton, Ohio, I can say that the
stucco house I own has a cinder block exterior coated with stucco. The
inside
walls are 2x4s and plaster board (sheet rock?). If I've used an incorrect
term, please
excuse me. I barely know a Phillips screwdriver from a flathead screwdriver
--- In HPFGU-OTChatter at yahoogroups.com, "zanooda2" <zanooda2 at ...> wrote:
Catlady:
> > The stucco houses in California are wood-framed.
zanooda:
> That's what puzzled me a little in Julie's post :-). After stucco was
mentioned, I looked it up and I was under an impression that stucco is only
used as a wall-covering material, not as a structural material (for
construction itself). I was just going to ask about it when your post came
along, LOL.
Geoff:
You've raised a similar thought to mine. My dictionary defines
stucco as "fine plaster used for coating wall surfaces or moulding
into architectural decorations."
Is the US definition different to mine? Because even if houses are
wooden-framed, I cannot see how the wall between the frames
can be made of a coating plaster.
Referring back to UK houses, most houses up to about the 1960s
were brick, including internal walls. External walls were - and still
are - double rows of bricks which were cavity walls, i.e. with a gap
between the two rows. Nowadays, owners of such houses often have
the gap filled with foam to improve the heat retention. Most modern
houses have external brick walls but internal walls are sometimes
wooden framed with materials such as chipboard as filler - which
makes it darned awkward to hang pictures and such things.
We are just putting our 1935 house on the market and hope to buy
something in the same age range because they are usually considered
better than modern houses.
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