
Aggregate: Pebbles, shingle, gravel
etc. used in the manufacture of concrete, and in the construction of
"soakaways".
Airbrick: Perforated brick used for
ventilation, especially to floor voids (beneath timber floors) and roof spaces.
Architrave: Joinery moulding around
window or doorway.
Asbestos: Fibrous mineral used in
the past for insulation. Can be a health hazard specialist advice should be
sought if asbestos (especially blue asbestos) is found.
Asbestos
Cement: Cement
with 10-15% asbestos fibre as reinforcement. Fragile will not bear heavy weights.
Hazardous fibres may be released if cut or drilled.
Ashlar: Finely dressed natural
stone: the best grade of masonry.
Asphalt: Black, tar-like
substance, strongly adhesive and impervious to moisture. Used on flat roofs and
floors.
Barge Board: (See Verge Board)
Balanced Flue: Common metal device
normally serving gas appliances which allows air to be drawn to the appliance
whilst also allowing fumes to escape.
Beetle
Infestation:
(Wood boring insects: woodworm) Larvae of various species of beetle which
tunnel into timber causing damage. Specialist treatment normally required. Can
also affect furniture.
Benching: Smoothly contoured
concrete slope beside drainage channel within an inspection chamber. Also known
as Haunching.
Bitumen: Black, sticky substance,
related to asphalt. Used in sealants, mineral felts and damp-proof courses.
Breeze Block: Originally made from
cinders ("breeze") the term now commonly used to refer to various
types of concrete and cement building blocks
Carbonation: A natural process
affecting the outer layer of concrete. Metal reinforcement within that layer is
liable to early corrosion, with consequent fracturing of the concrete.
Cavity Wall: Standard modern method of
building external walls of houses comprising two leaves of brick or blockwork
separated by a gap ("cavity") of about 50mm (2 inches).
Cavity Wall
Insulation:
Filling of wall cavities by one of various forms of insulation material -
Beads: Polystyrene beads pumped into the cavities. Will easily fall out if the
wall is broken open for any reason - Foam: Urea formaldehyde form, mixed on
site, and pumped into the cavities where it sets. Can lead to problems of
dampness and make replacement of wall-ties more difficult - Rockwool: Inert
mineral fibre pumped into the cavity.
Cavity Wall -
Tie:
Metal device bedded into the inner and outer leaves of cavity walls to
strengthen the wall. Failure by corrosion can result in the wall becoming
unstable specialist replacement ties are then required.
Cesspool: A simple method of drain
comprising a holding tank that needs frequent emptying. Not to be confused with
Septic Tank.
Chipboard: Also referred to as
"particle board". Chips of wood compressed and glued into sheet form.
Cheap method of decking to flat roofs, floors and (with Formica or melamine
surface) furniture, especially kitchen units.
Collar: Horizontal timber member
intended to restrain opposing roof slopes. Absence, removal or weakening can
lead to Roof Spread.
Combination
Boiler:
Modern form of gas boiler which activates on demand. With this form of boiler
there is no need for water storage tanks, hot water cylinders etc and generally
the pressure is much better for showers.
Condensation: Occurs when warm moist
air meets a cold surface. The water in the air then either settles as water
droplets on the surface (as it does on windows for example),or if the surface
is absorbent, it soaks into the surface. In the latter case condensation is
often not noticed unless or until mould appears. (See also Ventilation)
Coping /
Coping Stone:
Usually stone or concrete, laid on top of a wall as a decorative finish and to
stop rainwater soaking into the wall.
Corbell: Projection of stone,
brick, timber or metal jutting out from a wall to support a weight.
Cornice: Ornamental moulded
projection around the top of a building or around the wall of a room just below
the ceiling.
Coving: Curved junction between
wall and ceiling or (rarely) between ceiling and floor.
Dado Rail: Wooden moulding fixed
horizontally to a wall, aprroximately 1 metre above the floor, originally
intended to protect the wall against damage by chair-backs now very much a
decorative feature.
Damp Proof
Course: (DPC)
Course Layer of impervious material (mineral felt, pvc etc) incorporated into a
wall to prevent dampness rising up the wall or lateral dampness around windows,
doors etc. Various proprietary methods are available for damp proofing existing
walls including "electro-osmosis" and chemical injection.
Deathwatch
Beetle: (Xestobium Refovillosum) Serious insect pest in structural timbers, usually
affects old hardwoods with fungal decay already present.
Double
Glazing:
A method of thermal insulation usually either: Sealed unit: Two panes of glass
fixed and hermetically sealed together; or Secondary: In effect a second
"window" placed inside the original window.
Downpipes: Drainage pipes from
guttering.
Dry
Rot:(Serpula Lacrymans.) A fungus that attacks structural and joinery timbers, often
with devastating results. Can flourish in moist, unventilated areas. Not to be
confused with wet rot.
Eaves: The overhanging edge of a
roof.
Efflorescence: Salts crystallised on the
surface of a wall as a result of moisture evaporation.
Engineering
Brick:
Particularly strong and dense type of brick, sometimes used as damp-proof
course.
Fibreboard: Cheap, lightweight board
material of little strength, used in ceilings or as insulation to attics.
Flashing: Building technique used
to prevent leakage at a roof joint. Normally metal (lead, zinc, copper) but can
be cement, felt or proprietary material.
Flaunching: Contoured cement around
the base of chimney pots, to secure the pot and to throw off rain.
Flue: A smoke duct in a
chimney, or a proprietary pipe serving a heat-producing appliance such as a
central heating boiler.
Flue Lining: Metal (usually stainless
steel) tube within a flue essential for high output gas appliances such as
boilers. May also be manufactured from clay and built into the flue.
Foundations: Normally concrete, laid
underground as a structural base to a wall - in older buildings may be brick or
stone.
Frog: A depression imprinted in
the upper surface of a brick, to save clay, reduce weight and increase the
strength of the wall. Bricks should always be laid frog uppermost.
Fused Spur: Power socket that does
not have a plug going into it, instead the cable from an appliance like a
fridge, radiator, burglar alarm etc and has a fuse socket built into it.
Gable: Upper section of a wall,
usually triangular in shape, at either end of a ridged roof. - Gable end.
Gang: Referred to for 13amp
power pints 1 gang = 1 single socket 2 gang = 1 double socket.
Ground Heave: Swelling of clay sub-soil
due to absorption of moisture: can cause an upward movement in foundations.
Gully: An opening into a drain,
normally at ground level, placed to receive water etc. from downpipes and
wastepipes. Haunching: See Benching.It is also a term used to describe
the support to a drain underground.
Hip: The external junction
between two intersecting roof slopes.
Inspection
Chamber:
Commonly called a man hole. Access point to a drain comprising a chamber (of
brick, concrete or plastic) with the drainage channel at its base and a
removable cover at ground level.
Jamb: Side part of a doorway or
window.
Joist: Horizontal structural
timber used in flat roof, ceiling and floor construction. Occasionally also
metal.
Landslip: Downhill movement of
unstable earth, clay, rock etc. often following prolonged heavy rain or coastal
erosion, but sometimes due entirely to sub-soil having little cohesive
integrity.
Lath: Thin strip of wood used
in the fixing of roof tiles or slates, or as a backing to plaster. Lath and
plaster walls were very common in houses from late 1800,s to 1950's
Lintel: Horizontal structural
beam of timber, stone, steel or concrete placed over window or door openings.
LPG: Liquid Petroleum Gas or
Propane. Available to serve gas appliances in areas without mains gas. Requires
a storage tank.
Man Hole: - See Inspection Chamber
Mortar: Mixture of sand, cement,
lime and water, used to join stones or bricks.
Mullion: Vertical bar dividing
individual lights in a window.
Newel: Stout post supporting a
staircase handrail at top and bottom. Also, the central pillar of a winding or
spiral staircase.
Oversite: Rough concrete below
timber ground floors: the level of the oversite should be above external ground
level.
Parapet: Low wall along the edge
of a flat roof, balcony etc.
Pier: A vertical column of
brickwork or other material, used to strengthen the wall or to support a
weight.
Plasterboard: Stiff
"sandwich" of plaster between coarse paper. Now in widespread use for
ceilings and walls.
Pointing: Smooth outer edge of
mortar joint between bricks, stones etc.
Powder Post
Beetle: (Bostrychidae or Lyctidae family of beetles) A relatively uncommon pest
that can, if untreated, cause widespread damage to structural timbers.
Purlin: Horizontal beam in a roof
upon which rafters rest. Quoin: The external angle of a building; or,
specifically, bricks or stone blocks forming that angle.
Rafter: A sloping roof beam,
usually timber, forming the carcass of a roof. Random Rubble: Primitive method
of stone wall construction with no attempt at bonding or coursing.
Rendering: Vertical covering of a
wall either plaster (internally) or cement (externally), sometimes with
pebbledash, stucco or Tyrolean textured finish.
Reveals: The side faces of a
window or door opening. Ridge: The apex of a roof.
Riser: The vertical part of a
step or stair.
Rising Damp: Moisture soaking up a
wall from below ground, by capillary action causing rot in timbers, plaster
decay, decoration failure etc.
Roof Spread: Outward bowing of a wall
caused by the thrust of a badly restrained roof carcass (see Collar).
Screed: Final, smooth finish of a
solid floor, usually cement, concrete or asphalt.
Septic Tank: Tank Drain installation
whereby sewage decomposes through bacteriological action, which can be slowed
down or stopped altogether by the use of chemicals such as bleach, biological
washing powders etc. Not to be confused with Cesspool.
Settlement: General disturbance in a
structure showing as distortion in walls etc., possibly a result of major
structural failure, very dry weather conditions etc. Sometimes of little
current significance. (See also Subsidence)
Shakes: Naturally occurring
cracks in timber; in building timbers, shakes can appear quite dramatic, but
strength is not always impaired.
Shingles: Small rectangular slabs
of wood used on roofs instead of tiles, slates etc.
Soakaway: Arrangement for disposal
of rainwater, utilising graded aggregate laid below ground.
Soaker: Sheet metal (usually
lead, copper or zinc) at the junction of a roof with a vertical surface of a
chimneystack, adjoining wall etc. Associated with flashings that should overlay
soakers.
Soffit: The under-surface of
eaves, balcony, arch etc. Solid Fuel: Heating fuel, normally coal, coke or one
of a variety of proprietary fuels.
Spandrel: Space above and to the
sides of an arch; also the space below a staircase.
Stud
Partition:
Lightweight, sometimes non-load bearing wall construction comprising a
framework of timber faced with plaster, plasterboard or other finish.
Subsidence: Ground movement,
generally downward, possible a result of mining activities or clay shrinkage.
Sub-soil: Soil lying immediately
below the topsoil, upon which foundations usually bear.
Sulphate
Attack:
Chemical reaction activated by water, between tricalcium aluminate and soluble
sulphates. Can cause deterioration in brick walls and concrete floors.
Tie Bar: Heavy metal bar passing
through a wall, or walls, to brace a structure suffering from structural
instability.
Torching: Mortar applied on the
underside of roof tiles or slates to help prevent moisture penetration. Not
necessary when a roof is underdrawn with felt.
Transom: Horizontal part of a step
or stair.
Tread: The horizontal part of a
step or stair.
Trussed
Rafters:
Method of roof construction utilising prefabricated triangular framework of
timbers. Now widely used in domestic construction.
Underpinning: Method strengthening weak
foundations whereby a new, stronger foundation is placed beneath the original.
Valley Gutter: Horizontal or sloping
gutter, usually lead-or-tile-lined, at the internal intersection between two
roof slopes.
Ventilation: Necessary in all
buildings to disperse moisture resulting from bathing, cooking, breathing etc.
and to assist in prevention of condensation. Floors -necessary to avoid rot,
especially Dry Rot; achieved by airbricks near to ground level. Roofs -
necessary to disperse condensation within roof spaces; achieved either by
airbricks in gables or ducts at the eaves. (see Condensation)
Verge: The edge of a roof,
especially over a gable.
Verge Board: Timber, sometimes
decorative plastic material, placed at the verge of a roof: also known as
bargeboard.
Wainscot: Wood panelling or
boarding on the lower part of an internal wall.
Wall Plate: Timber placed at the
eaves of a roof, to take the weight of the roof timbers.
Wastepipe: Drainage pipe for baths,
basins, wc's.
Wet Rot:
(Coniophora Puteana)
Decay of timber due to damp conditions. Not to be confused with the more
serious Dry Rot.
Woodworm: Colloquial term for
beetle infestation: usually intended to mean Common Furniture Beetle (Anobium
Punctatum): by far the most frequently encountered insect attack in
structural and joinery timbers.
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