Would seem a pretty simple question right? And yes, it’s a pretty simple answer – cladding made from stone. However from the meetings I have with contractors and surveyors, I see it often gets over-complicated in designers’ minds and confused with traditional stone masonry.
Natural stone is one of the oldest materials used by man in construction. We only have to look at buildings such as the Taj Mahal completed in 1648 using white marble, or the Great Pyramid thought to have been completed in 2560BC made predominantly out of limestone to appreciate the longevity of stone as a material. (Imagine the architect specifying the Design Life for the Pyramid….)
O auala faufale ua manino lava na suia talu ona latou fausia le Taj Mahal, ma faafetai i vaega eseese ma fefaʻatauaʻiga i totonu o le fale faufale faʻafesoʻotaʻi ma fesoʻotaʻiga i luga o le tele o tausaga, tatou te le toe faʻaputuina poloka maa mamafa i luga o le tasi ma le isi e fatuina ai foliga vaaia. o se fale maa mautu.
Traditional stone masonry (not something we do here at AlterEgo by the way), is loaded onto the building’s foundations and uses stones and mortar, tied back with wall-ties – think brickwork.
O aso nei o lo'o fa'apipi'iina ma'a i le isi itu o lo'o tautau mai le fausaga o le fale, ma fa'apipi'i fa'atasi i le auala lava e tasi e pei o se uamea uamea.
Vaai oe, o le ufiufi maa, o se puipui timu faiga ma e tatau ona fa'apea.
Looking through a cross section of a typical stone cladding build-up you’ll see lots of familiar components: spreader bars, helping-hand brackets, rails and T-bars. It’s only the facing material which is interchangeable.
There are a few nuances when working with natural stone for the first time, but nothing that a day’s training and our on-site support won’t cover.
So if you’re a contractor used to installing aluminium and steel cladding or you specialize in terracotta; don’t be afraid of stone! Check out this video showing the simplicity of our EGO-02S system EGO 02s INSTALLATION BETA – YouTube
A oʻo mai i le faʻapipiʻiina o le laulau faʻapipiʻi maʻa i le fausaga lagolago, e lua auala faʻapipiʻi autu:
With an undercut anchor system, typically used for larger format panels, holes are pre-drilled into the back of the stone, a sleeve and bolt inserted and fixed onto a hanging clasp and horizontal system. This method is good for natural stone panels with a thickness range from 30-50mm and can be used in both stack and stretcher bond layouts, typically in a portrait layout. Undercut anchors are always used in soffit situations.
Talu ai o faʻamau uma o loʻo i tua o le laulau, o lenei metotia e faʻalilolilo atoa, e leai ni faʻamau e iloa.
The kerf method of fixing stone is where a continuous groove is cut in the top and bottom of the stone, and the stone simply sits on a rail or clasp at the bottom and restrained at the top. A kerf system works particularly well for horizontally laid panels in either stack or stretcher bond.
O le saoasaoa ma le faigofie o le faʻapipiʻiina ma tuʻufaʻatasia ma le mea moni e mafai ona faʻapipiʻi panels e le faʻasolosolo faʻasolosolo e avea ai lenei metotia ma faʻaoga sili ona faʻaogaina maʻa.
O auala fa'apipi'i uma e masani lava ona tatala fa'atasi, peita'i o so'oga fa'asino i se fa'amaufa'ailoga e le femalaga'i e mafai ona fa'aalia ai se fale masonry masani.
If you’re considering stone for your next project, please get in contact.