“World's Most Complete Neighborpedia”
Explore:   What's happening in your neck of the woods?

"Crack House," or----She'll be comin' round the corner when she comes!

Figuring out cracks in brick veneer usually fits one of several possibilities. During my first walk around the exterior of this home, I noticed a fairly typical diagonal crack running from the base of the chimney upward at about a 30 degree angle. When we find such a crack, we usually look for a corresponding crack. In this case I expected to find another crack (or cracks) somewhere along the same side of the house. When the plane of the brick work is broken up by windows, steps in the foundation and areas of different kinds of siding, there are weak points that are likely points of cracking.

This first picture shows the location of the crack highlighted in red.

Crack in brick veneer

Here is a close-up of the area showing the obvious crack.

Detail of crack in brick veneer

From a distance, there really was not a whole lot jumping out at me to explain this crack. No visible cracks in the foundation----no gaping separations anywhere. One thing is for sure in this scenario: "She'll be comin' round the corner when she comes." As I rounded the corner to the back of the house (to the right in the picture), this is what I saw.

Corresponding crack around the corner

“Hecka-crack”

So now we have to go back to the side view to help with the explanation.

In this picture if we make point “A” stationary and the entire foundation settles along its length to point “B,” it allows all of the brick veneer to move together as a unit without any other cracks forming----except at the pivot point “A.”

A picture of settlement

In this case the crack that develops at point “A” had a corresponding crack on the side of the house around the corner----and in this case it was where the foundation was weakened at the door to the basement. Doorways cut through foundations are a very common “breaking point”----as are windows and step-ups in the foundation. These kinds of corresponding cracks result in not only foundation settlement but tilting of the foundation----as is evidenced in this case by the brick pulling away at the top at point “C.”

Tilting foundation settlement

This is a little unusual because the brick usually stays adhered to the wood framing creating long horizontal cracks more or less parallel to the settling foundation. In older homes, the brick ties that hold the brick to the wood structure pull out of the deteriorating mortar when put under this kind of stress. In this case the whole façade of brick is vulnerable to falling off the side of the home under the right seismic conditions.

This more or less patchable crack at point “A” has now become a fairly major structural repair involving stabilizing the foundation and redoing the brick veneer.

Charles Buell

Click on the Rose A Group by any other name. to check out: AHA!---A Forum of Landmark Proportions---your Group

PS, for those of you that are new to my blog (or for some other "unexplained" reason have never noticed)sunsmileall pictures and smiley-face inserts (emoticons) (when I use them) have messages that show up when you point at them with your cursor.Just quack on me to subscribe


Raven DeCroeDeCroe, is my "etherial" home inspector assistant and occasionally flies into my blog and other people's blogs to offer assistance. To find out more about her beginnings just click on Raven.

Posted Wednesday Mar 18