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Things Fall Apartby Peter Koch |
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The crumbling future of Buffalo’s brick buildings
The venerable old brick buildings of Buffalo’s yesteryear are set to collapse. The writing’s on the wall. Or at least it was, before all the walls started crumbling.
Take the old White Bros. livery stable at 430 Jersey Street. This past Monday, April 7, Peggy Farrell stepped out the back door of her house to hang her laundry, when suddenly bricks started falling around her. You see, Farrell lives on the cottage end of Summer Street, in the shadow of that lovely, hulking 1800s brick structure. Its walls, which are attractively covered with a lush carpet of ivy throughout the summer, are crumbling. All told 118 bricks fell from the northwest and southwest walls Monday, loosing a huge piece of gutter, which subsequently fell into a neighboring yard on Jersey Street. Unless it is shored up soon, an avalanche of bricks will fall, causing serious structural problems for the rest of the building.
The livery stable is only latest symptom of a growing problem for brick structures in the city. In the past three months, four more bricks buildings have been so damaged that they literally began to fall apart. First it was McBride’s Irish Pub on Chicago Street in the First Ward. The late-1800s building was damaged in a couple of January windstorms, the second of which caused the front wall of the entire second floor to dramatically cave in. That prompted a demolition call by city officials, and it came down last month.
Second was the Karpeles Manuscript Museum at North Street and Elmwood Avenue. On February 17, a 100-by-six-foot section of that building’s upper facade collapsed onto Elmwood Avenue. Police subsequently closed down the street for about 12 hours.
Eight days later, another Allentown building had a major brick wall collapse. The building at 260 Allen Street that houses Pawprints by Penny, a pet-grooming and daycare business, and which is located where Allen Street bends and becomes Wadsworth, lost a 15-by-six-foot section of brick facade.
Then, on March 30, the city closed down the right lane of Goodell Street out of concern over loose bricks on a parapet at the top of the Trico Building’s south-facing wall. Repairs to that building, which have just begun, will cost between $250,000 and $300,000.
While nobody was injured in any of these cases, it would seem that we’re looking at a worrying trend for brick structures. So, walls aside, what gives?
It all comes down to masonry and weather. Over time—40 to 60 years, say—the bond between bricks and the lyme-based mortar that holds them together breaks down, allowing water to penetrate the wall. Every time it freezes outside, then, the water expands into ice, slowly tearing the bricks apart. This winter, however, we had an odd cycle of freezing and thawing weather. It would rain over the weekend, then drop into the teens for a week-long blast from Old Man Winter. And it happened over and over again, maybe a dozen times. That’s like aging a building 12 years over the course of one winter.
According to Ken Keller of Freedom Restoration, a specialist of sorts in masonry, says that there are two reasons the bricks are coming down around Buffalo. “Two reasons: people haven’t put in what they should, and this winter we’ve had a terrible freeze-thaw cycle. A lot of freezing, a lot of rain. And it just got into the brickwork and ripped the hell out of it.” Add to that the wind, which knocked the loose bricks down. There were 58 days with 30 miles per hour winds or better this winter, and several days where gusts exceeded 60 miles per hour.
Keller says that brick walls can fall apart in much less time if they’re not built and maintained with due diligence. The section of wall that collapsed on the Karpeles, for instance, was only built nine years ago. Without proper tie-backs—header brick or steel wall ties—attaching the bricks to the backing wall, it was easily ravaged by this winter’s freakish weather.
From now on, when considering our crumbling brick-and-mortar buildings, perhaps we’ll have to call it “demolition by neglect…and global warming-induced freakish weather.”
—peter koch
Reader Comments
jose l chang 19 Apr 2008, 20:32
I own a brick building on elmwood in allentown that is showing a bulge in
the front facade, this article has brought to my attention the danger of
putting this off any longer. Has anyone dealt w/ freedom restoration or a
good mason that will know if this facade can be pulled back using wall
washers or if a complete rebuild is in order.thanks
paul morgan 13 Jun 2008, 13:44
RALLY TO SAVE THE LIVERY TODAY FRIDAY JUNE 13TH 4PM @ JERSEY AND RICHMOND,
PLEASE TRY TO ATTEND, THE CITY NEEDS TO ADDRESS OUR OUTRAGE! STOP THE FREUDENHEIMS OF BUFFALO AND DEMOLITION BY NEGLECT OF OUR COLLECTIVE HERITAGE. VISIT WWW.SAVETHELIVERY.COM
jamie 13 Jun 2008, 16:05
you can hold a rally, but you can't save the livery.... after a minor
collapse a few days ago there's hole in the north wall big enough to drive
a Sherman tank through and the entire structure is going to collapse on its
own.... my mother lives behind it and was in her yard hanging clothes on
the line when ton a bricks came crashing down from the south wall ..could
have killed her.... that building needs to come down before someone gets
hurt or worse... and yes, the Freudenheims have owned it since the 1980s...
and just let the beautiful old stable rot... now taxpayers are going to pay
$300,000 to demolish it.... that's criminal.
seth 15 Jun 2008, 21:59
At least now that the demolition has been halted the surrounding buildings
continue to be at risk for falling bricks, walls, damage, etc. I don't feel
its responsbile to halt demolition of a building that's already falling
down when it puts the homes around it at risk.
tommyJ 16 Jun 2008, 08:51
Jamie.... I agree -- she could have been hurt, thankfully she wasn't. I still hope this can be saved, but if it can't -- the slumlords Bob & Nina that own it should be held responsible, not taxpayers!!!! That's 2 buildings that will have been demolished by neglect by Bob & Nina!
john 06 Aug 2008, 18:15
sounds like you need a good mason
Steve 03 Sep 2008, 08:30
This pile of rubble building should be torn down. No one even cared about
it until it started falling over. The street has been a dead end for months
and the quiet atmosphere of Jersey st is no more thanks to a few
"concerned" citizens that I never even see in this area anymore. All this
just to save a pile of bricks that no one will ever notice once its saved.
TJ
03 Sep 2008, 08:39
Steve, Shutup. The citizens complained and complained for years about the building for the city to do something, they did nothing. Bitch to the Mayors office about their being useless. The city should never have allowed it to get to this state. The Fraud-enheims have a track record of neglecting buildings, why does the city keep allowing them to do it? Leave a Comment:
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