{"id":547248,"date":"2025-06-05T12:04:25","date_gmt":"2025-06-05T16:04:25","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.finehomebuilding.com\/?p=547248"},"modified":"2025-08-04T09:44:35","modified_gmt":"2025-08-04T13:44:35","slug":"mortar-for-old-masonry","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.finehomebuilding.com\/2025\/06\/05\/mortar-for-old-masonry","title":{"rendered":"Mortar for Old Masonry"},"content":{"rendered":"
Chances are good that if you own or work on old houses, you\u2019re going to come across masonry in some form or another. Depending on the home\u2019s region, style, and how long ago it was built, you might be dealing with foundations, walls, chimneys, window and door sills, and decorative architectural details constructed from stone, brick, block, or tile. The common thread in all of these is mortar, the glue that holds everything together.<\/p>\n
Like any part of an old building, mortar joints are a maintenance item. Over time, mortar is pushed and pulled by freeze\/thaw cycles and eroded by weather, and mortar joints need to be scraped back and refilled in a process known as pointing. But mortar is a general word that is used for a wide variety of different mixtures made from a variety of ingredients in different ratios.<\/p>\n
In the end, the ingredients and ratios used to make the mortar determine how it performs\u2014or in many unfortunate cases, how it leads to a lot of irreversible damage to original masonry work. But by understanding the basic ingredients of mortar and how they have changed over time, you can choose the right mix for your project, ensuring that the masonry units don\u2019t spall or crack.<\/p>\n
Here\u2019s an overly simplified timeline of mortar: Up until the mid-1800s, masons used a mixture of lime putty and sand. Lime putty was made on the job site by combining lime or quicklime with water, a practice known as slaking. By 1900, masons slowly began incorporating portland cement\u2014a fast-curing, dense, hard-setting hydraulic cement\u2014into the mortar mixture as an additive to speed set time and increase strength. By 1950, portland cement was dominant, and knowledge of using lime mortars was largely lost.<\/p>\n
If all we needed mortar to do was hold a wall together, then we would have long ago abandoned those sand-and-cement mixtures and switched to some space-age adhesive. Aside from aesthetics, the reason we continue to use mortar is that, in addition to holding the masonry units together, it also acts as a sacrificial component.<\/p>\n
Expansion and contraction, freezing and thawing, and structural shifts all put strain on masonry assemblies. If the mortar is denser and stronger than the masonry units it\u2019s holding together, then it\u2019s the masonry units that will eventually fail. But using mortar that is softer and more vapor-permeable than the masonry units means it\u2019s the mortar that absorbs the damage.<\/p>\n
Although there are experts in the field of dating historic houses and components, the most common practice for figuring out the age of a masonry assembly is to make an educated guess based on property documents and other historical records. Bricks that are at least 100 years old may look inconsistent in size or shape rather than uniform and rectilinear, they may be smooth surfaced rather than rough, and they often have dark specks or streaks.<\/p>\n
But be aware that in poorer communities with less access to modern technology, people may have made bricks differently from how they were made in prosperous areas, so there could be two very different-looking bricks from different regions but the same time in history.<\/p>\n