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brick veneer on wood sill plate?
are there any problems/issues with bearing brick veneer directly on a pressure treated wood sill plate?
i dont see why not. if you dont like it, why not just put a smaller sill plate?
it's a condition where there is brick veneer is on the interior. so, the brick needs to run up between the floor joists.
based on the building code (ibc) masonry can "not" be supported by wood.
i inspected a job recently in chinatown, philadelphia where
building official made builder remove pressure treated wood lintels and replace them with steel angles.
the code section i refer to from ibc 2003 is 2304.12 page 457.
there are exceptions for veneer, but only when wood is part of a wood foundation system or veneer is interior.
ironmon is correct. thou shalt not support brick on wood.
we support veneer on fireplace with wood all the time. a lot of times the veneer goes from floor to ceiling. i cant see why not especially because the conrete is supporting the the brick, not the wood.
that is just the code. the intent is that if there is a fire, the masonry won't fall on the firefighters. an exposed gable with mansonry veneer on it supported by wood rafters below is where this is meant to apply. i don't think the intent was for a sill plate, but that is the literal interpretation.
ironmon and structuralaggie are correct according to the 2003 ibc. but ultimately, it depends on the code. don't quote me, but the 2000 ibc allowed wood supporting masonry veneer if it weighed less than 40psf and some other criteria, but i believe the 1997 sbc didn't allow it.
i have the 2003 irc (international residential code) in front of me and it allows masonry to be supported by wood.
section 703.7.2. exterior venneer support.
"except in seismic design categories d1 and d2, exterior masonry veneers having an installed weight of 40psf (195kg/m2) or less shall be permitted to be supported on wood or cold-formed steel construction. when masonry veneer supported by wood or cold-formed steel construction adjoins masonry veneer supported by the foundation, there shall be a movement joint between the veneer supported by the wood or cold-formed steel construction and the veneer supported by the foundation. the wood or cold-formed steel construction supporting the masonry veneer shall be designed to limit the deflection to l/600 of the span for the supporting
i will have to check into the irc requirements (i don't have one). the old ubc had the weight limit of 20psf, which pretty well covered adheared masonry.
although it may not be relevant to your geographic location, the masonry design code for canada (csa s304)states that for wood structures of four storeys or less, non-load-bearing masonry cladding may be supported by wood |
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