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briquette-entre-poteaux

 
Architecture: briquette-entre-poteaux

In French Vernacular architecture of Louisiana, a relatively inexpensive, porous brick that was once used to fill the spaces between upright posts and diagonal braces in a home of timber-framed construction; often found in poteaux-en-terre houses; usually the entire brick-filled exterior surface was finished with a coat of lime plaster to protect the surface; then often covered with clapboard. Many two-story town houses and houses of well-to-do planters had basement walls of brick and upper walls of briquette-entre-poteaux. Also see bousillage.


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Architecture. McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Architecture and Construction. Copyright © 2003 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more