Masonry Magazine February 1973 Page. 14

Words: J. Dalzell, O. Olsen, Biltmore Company
Masonry Magazine February 1973 Page. 14

Masonry Magazine February 1973 Page. 14
14

The mouse that roared

Load/bearing masonry makes it to the top

Used to be, masonry was a mouse. Weak in tension and shear, fine for the low rise, just not up to high-rise specs. Until somebody started looking for a better way to build a wall, found it in reinforced concrete masonry, and wound up with a better way to build a high-rise. The process is simple.

Start with a little better block... more cement in the mortar... a few bars of steel...and a little grout. The steel adds resilience and toughness to the wall... the masonry block stiffens the steel and protects it from fire. Suddenly, you have a new structural animal.

No columns, no beams, no forming... when you finish, the walls, the structural system is complete. Firesafe, maintenance free, virtually indestructible, and inexpensive. High rise construction was never better.

Which goes to show why masonry isn't a mouse any more. When you have all of this going for you, it's worth roaring about. For more information, contact Masonry Marketing Manager, General Portland Cement Company.

Sunshine Towers, Clearwater, Florida. J. Whitney Dalzell, Architect; O. E. Olsen & Associates, Engineers; Biltmore Construction Company, Contractors.


Florida & Signal Mountain Cements

General Portland Cement Company

masonry February, 1973


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