bookowski
Structural
- Aug 29, 2010
- 983
In this area typical brownstone/rowhouse construction used 3x dimension lumber pocketed into brick masonry 'party walls', walls that are shared by both neighbors and therefore not exposed. These joists were bricked in tight, no air gap, and had a fire cut at their ends.
When doing joist replacement, new joists into existing pockets, the question has come up about protecting the ends of the joists. My interpretation/understanding about wood in contact with masonry was that this applied to exterior walls or walls likely to get wet. These are essentially interior walls as they are shared by a neighbor. I've had some suggestions to wrap the ends in a membrane - but that seems like a lot of work and I am not confident they'd get it well sealed anyway.
The existing joist ends are typically fine in these conditions and have lasted 100+ yrs, unless there was a specific water leak/issue at a particular location.
Any code reference/guidance on when you are required to use treated wood, or to protect the ends? We could leave the pockets open but I don't like the way that feels - I prefer some connectivity.
When doing joist replacement, new joists into existing pockets, the question has come up about protecting the ends of the joists. My interpretation/understanding about wood in contact with masonry was that this applied to exterior walls or walls likely to get wet. These are essentially interior walls as they are shared by a neighbor. I've had some suggestions to wrap the ends in a membrane - but that seems like a lot of work and I am not confident they'd get it well sealed anyway.
The existing joist ends are typically fine in these conditions and have lasted 100+ yrs, unless there was a specific water leak/issue at a particular location.
Any code reference/guidance on when you are required to use treated wood, or to protect the ends? We could leave the pockets open but I don't like the way that feels - I prefer some connectivity.