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Hi everyone,
I recently had a plumber reroute a copper water pipe through a brick wall, and the result left a noticeable gap in the brickwork, as shown in the photo attached. I'm looking for advice on the best way to fill this gap properly.
A few details:
What materials and techniques would you recommend for filling this gap and blending the repair with the surrounding wall?
Thanks in advance for your help!
Hi @John9
Firstly the copper pipe wont corrode touching any thing so no stress there. it will colour the same as whats there allready
You need to re lay those bricks for starters is the best repairs so we need to match your mortar colour as close as possible to your wall colour,
Try find a whole brick replacemrnt for the half brick to fully close the wall.
Use Off White cement powder x bag with a bag of white sand. Mix 1 part off white cement. to 6 parts sand add water so it is mixed in 100 % in a tooth brush like consistancy. Color will never be perfect.
so using gloved hand pull out those bricks wet the wall bricks and pulled out bricks to wet.
Now put in 10 mm thick layer of mortar at the first brick gap including the sides place the wet brick in place pushing excess mortar out of the way with the brick until it is flush with the wall tap it level.
Fill the remaining hole and 2 brick spacing with mortar all round it might on stick to the underside but try.
Now do the top bricks only before you insert the wet bricks put mortar on the top of the bricks too.
It will be messy but try get the bricks level with nice 10 mm mortar spacing it may take a coulpe of attempts
once all the bricks in level and flush with the wall push extra mortar all around the bricks to fill the gaps,
Now to approximate your Bagged brick look wipe some more cement on to the replacement bricks if they not the original colors.
So you have a mortar covering all the bricks now . use the rag to wipe in some light swirl marks to try match the original wall.
Wash any excess mortar off the wall with a big sponge dripping with water to your satisfaction. also the sponge may aid in swirl patterns,
the repair wont be perfect but if you paint later the whole thing should be blended in.
Thank you for the detailed explanation. One detail not visible in the original photo is the T-joint where the copper pipe enters the wall space. Should I leave a gap around this area and fill it with expanding foam, or would another method be better? Please refer to the image below.
Thanks @John9
re the extra photo. it all makes sense now.
Turn the rendered brick sides out so the pattern is still visable this will help blend the repair back to the original wall texture.
Basically I would cut and put in a 1/4 brick in the left hand side near the pipe and use the original 1 and 1/2 bricks as seen in your photos on the right side of the pipe.
That will leave the brick gaps as extra large. That is perfecly ok just fill the morter lines up with mortar.
Fill mortar around the copper pipe the tape on the copper pipe will allow for small wall movements if it happens while encased in the mortar.
Fill all of the brick gap spaces with mortar and aim to make the brick face flat and even with the brick and scrape the mortar flat and even to the vertical wall exterior.
If you can use more morter to reproduce the sweeping style across the brick repairs, in the same thickness this will be great.
Remeber a large wet sponge will help clean up the brick work with a bucket of water.
Hi @John9,
A warm welcome to the Bunnings Workshop community and thank you for your question.
It seems @Jewelleryrescue has already covered things well.
The basic process would be to reinstate the bricks using mortar to set them in place. There are also no issues with mortar being in contact with copper pipes so you can use mortar and bricks close to the pipe.
Once the gap is filled and the mortar has set, render over the bricks to match the surrounds.
If you have any further questions I can assist with, please don't hesitate to ask.
Jacob
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