Repointing Mortar Joints
When joints recede and crumble, water gets behind the face. How to rake, mix a compatible mortar, and tool joints before frost returns.
Open guidePractical, source-checked guidance on repointing mortar joints, repairing spalled brick, and sealing masonry foundations across Canadian winters from Halifax to the Prairies.
Freeze-thaw cycling drives most masonry deterioration in Canada. Each guide covers one failure mode, how to read the symptoms, and the sequence of work most contractors follow.
When joints recede and crumble, water gets behind the face. How to rake, mix a compatible mortar, and tool joints before frost returns.
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Spalling means the brick face has popped off after water froze inside it. How to identify causes, replace units, and avoid sealing the wrong way.
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Foundations sit where moisture and frost concentrate. How to manage grading, drainage, and breathable coatings without trapping water.
Open guideWater that enters masonry expands as it freezes. Repeated cycles through the winter widen cracks, push joints apart, and break brick faces. The guides on this site are framed around that single mechanism.
Failed joints, hairline cracks, and porous brick let moisture into the wall assembly before any visible damage appears.
As trapped water freezes it expands, exerting pressure inside joints and brick pores through each cold cycle.
Many cycles per winter cause cumulative cracking, spalling, and joint loss that accelerate once the surface opens up.
Each article moves through the same stages so you can compare repairs and plan a single working season. The labelled stages below mirror how the guides are organized.
Send a note and we will point you to the relevant reference material. This site publishes general guidance and does not arrange contractor work.
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RegionCanada — cold-climate masonry