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Does our house wall look structurally sound?


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Hello,

Hopefully this is the right place for this question. So basically we purchased a house (built in the late 60's), had a full structural survey and the walls were described as "good original workmanship" and also a bit contradictory "the pointing is in basic condition" and "the pointing is in poor condition". Fast forward a few months of living here - Turns out our surveyor was useless. Missed Japanese knotweed and numerous other things. After living here and having a good examination of the walls, i would describe them as absolutely terrible original workmanship and borderline needing rebuilding. The joint lines don't match up, bricks are wonky as hell, joint gaps vary from an inch to a few mm, very poor quality bricks, the walls themselves are no where near straight in any direction (whether this was how they were built or wall ties failing i do not know), spalled bricks everywhere and completely loose bricks that can be pulled out (about 3 i've noticed so far). I also noticed on many of them there are tiny white lines / maybe cracks which i'm guessing means they are close to becoming spalled.

The reason for the condition of the walls is imo due to a few factors - Failed cavity wall insulation, house is on side of a mountain, poor quality bricks and absolutely no maintenance.

So my main question is, from the pictures and my description, do these walls looks structurally sound? As in, are they savable or does it look like the outer leaf needs rebuilding?

My plan was to get the insulation removed, replace all the spalled bricks, fix the loose bricks, repoint and then i was wondering about trying some brick stain as i've seen some good result with it. Failing that, rendering would be the next thing i'd consider.

My other question is, is there a surveyor who just deals with walls? I know you get wall tie surveyors (which we may need to do) but who's the expert who can comment on the structural condition of a wall? The CIGA guy who came to look at the cavity wall insulation described it as one of the worst walls he's ever seen and couldn't believe we purchased the house.. but then a random bricklayer said they were okay and solid so i don't know what to believe.

Many Thanks!

Edit - I can't seem to embed the photos, tried everything i can think of so will just have to put the links.

 

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Edited by Spetznaaz
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1

 

Probably the pictures are too large and too many for the forum software?

 

That is never going to be a pretty house, it probably was not when it was new, and I doubt it is going to fall down.  It does not take a surveyor to tell you the workmanship is basic and it would benefit from repointing and some spalled bricks replacing.

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I read you description before looking at the picture ProDave has copied.

Doesn't look anything like as bad as i was expecting.

Can you attach a few pics of the main concerns. Low resolution, not too many at this stage.

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These surveys are not worth the paper they are written on. My mate bought a bungalow, I viewed it and gave him my opinion on a few faults I found  , mortgage  co demanded full survey, he only spotted a couple of my “faults”. When moving in the removal guy carrying a heavy box fell through the floor, turned out the whole bungalow floor was full of woodworm and was worst where the double bed was (which was there when I viewed it). Mate tried to claim off survey co but told “we take no responsibility of things we cannot see”, even when threatened with a solicitors letter they declined. I ended up spending two weeks with him renewing the whole ground floor. (But we did insulate it at the same time).

Edited by joe90
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59 minutes ago, joe90 said:

Funny how the front wall of the house looks so much better 🤷‍♂️, perhaps the brickies thought they were building a terraced house 🤣

Yes, I was thinking along the same lines but put it down to weather direction

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Thanks for the replies guys. I will try and see if i can embed a couple photos.

 

5 hours ago, markc said:

Got to agree with @saveasteading I would say it’s fairly typical for the era and a bit of TLC will sort the gable out. I would definitely do something with the door header though, no idea what’s going on there

 

What do you mean by the door header? The vertical bricks above the door? They do that a lot around here, what would you say the issue is with it?

 

5 hours ago, joe90 said:

Funny how the front wall of the house looks so much better 🤷‍♂️, perhaps the brickies thought they were building a terraced house 🤣

 

4 hours ago, markc said:

Yes, I was thinking along the same lines but put it down to weather direction

 

The front walls are made with a much better quality brick, maybe due to weather direction but i reckon they did it so they looked nice from the front. 

 

Got some more photos below:

20220711_140147.thumb.jpg.b1601e5a233ab9ba067aa6eb037cfb7a.jpg

 

 

Edited by Spetznaaz
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19 hours ago, Spetznaaz said:

wondering about trying some brick stain as i've seen some good result with it.

Once you've done the general overhaul, a simple coat of black paint and some contrasting cladding can make a difference. I know it's a semi but increasingly I'm seeing funked-up houses one side of a pair or at the end of a terrace. Cheap and easy fix....though not sure if the white upvc is new / being retained (can also be painted as other recent post)

986260910_blackbricks-1(2).jpeg

719731123_blackbricks-1(1).jpeg

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  • 4 weeks later...

In terms of structural soundness, the main concern is wall tie failure. There is a high probability they have failed.

 

Usually pointing isn't as big of a concern, but locally it has got to a point where that is allow bricks to work loose. 

 

I think I'd be costing up an option for external insulation, once the wall ties are remediated. 

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