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brickwork
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   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia 0.25 sec.

brickwork

Method of construction using bricks made of fired clay or sun-dried earth (see adobe). In wall building, bricks are either laid out as stretchers (long side facing out) or as headers (short side facing out). The two principal patterns of brickwork are English bond in which alternate courses, or layers, are made up of stretchers or headers only, and Flemish bond in which stretchers and headers alternate within courses.

Some evidence exists of the use of fired bricks in ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt, although the Romans were the first to make extensive use of this technology. Today's mass production of fired bricks tends to be concentrated in temperate regions where there are plentiful supplies of fuel available.



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On the principal facade, Sussex brick in a Flemish bond frames inlaid glazed terracotta, which recedes deeper still as a ribbed screen wall returns to form a generous sheltered porch.
However, their uniqueness--marked by Flemish bond facades and paneled windows, not to mention the mere fact that they still exist in between various modern high-rises--gives them a charm of their own.
But this is just Frampton's way of insisting on the elevated, philosophical status of his subject matter, even when he is talking about the technicalities of reinforced concrete or the difference between English bond and Flemish bond.
 
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