|
Backfill |
The gravel or earth
replaced in the space around a building wall after foundations are in place. |
|
Balusters |
Upright supports of a
balustrade rail. |
|
Balustrade |
A row of balusters topped
by a rail, edging a balcony or a staircase. |
|
Baseboard |
A board along the floor
against walls and partitions to hid gaps. |
|
Batt |
Insulation in the form of
a blanket, rather than loose filling. |
|
Batten |
Small thin strips covering
joints between wider boards on exterior building surfaces. |
|
Beam |
One of the principal
horizontal wood or steel members of a building. |
|
Bearing Wall |
A wall that supports a
floor or roof of a building. |
|
Bib or Bibcock |
A water faucet to which a
hose may be attached, also called a hose bib or sill cock. |
|
Bleeding |
Seeping of resin or gum
from lumber. This term is also used in referring to the process of drawing
air from water pipes. |
|
Brace |
A piece of wood or other
material used to form a triangle and stiffen some part of a structure. |
|
Braced Framing |
Construction technique
using posts and cross-bracing for greater rigidity. |
|
Brick Veneer |
Brick used as the outer
surface of a framed wall. |
|
Bridging |
Small wood or metal pieces
placed diagonally between floor joists. |
|
Building Paper |
Heavy paper used in walls
or roofs to dampproof. |
|
Built-Up Roof |
A roofing material applied
in sealed, waterproof layers, where there is only a slight slope to the
roof. |
|
Butt Joint |
Joining point of two
pieces of wood or molding. |
|
Bx Cable |
Electricity cable wrapped
in rubber with a flexible steel outer covering. |
|
Cantilever |
A projecting beam or
joist, not supported at one end, used to support an extension of a
structure. |
|
Carriage |
The member which supports
the steps or treads of a stair. |
|
Casement |
A window sash that opens
on hinges at the vertical edge. |
|
Casing |
Door and window framing. |
|
Cavity Wall |
A hollow wall formed by
firmly linked masonry walls, providing an insulating air space between. |
|
Chimney Cap |
Concrete capping around
the top of chimney bricks and around the floors to protect the masonry from
the elements. |
|
Chair Rail |
Wooden molding on a wall
around a room at the level of a chair back. |
|
Chamfered Edge |
Molding with pared-off
corners. |
|
Chase |
A groove in a masonry wall
or through a floor to accommodate pipes or ducts. |
|
Chimney Breast |
The horizontal
projection-usually inside a building-of a chimney from the wall in which it
is built. |
|
Circuit Breaker |
A safety device which
opens (breaks) an electric circuit automatically when it becomes overloaded. |
|
Cistern |
A tank to catch and store
rain water. |
|
Clapboard |
A long thin board, thicker
on one edge, overlapped and nailed on for exterior siding. |
|
Collar Beam |
A horizontal beam fastened
above the lower ends of rafters to add rigidity. |
|
Coping |
Tile or brick used to cap
or cover the top of a masonry wall. |
|
Corbel |
A horizontal projection
from a wall, forming a ledge or supporting a structure above it. |
|
Corner Bead |
A strip of wood or metal
for protecting the external corners of plastered walls. |
|
Cornice |
Horizontal projection at
the top of a wall or under the overhanging part of the roof. |
|
Course |
A horizontal row of
bricks, cinder blocks or other masonry materials. |
|
Cove Lighting |
Concealed light sources
behind a cornice or horizontal recess which direct the light upon a
reflecting ceiling. |
|
Crawl Space |
A shallow, unfinished
space beneath the first floor of a house which has no basement, used for
visual inspection and access to pipes and ducts. Also, a shallow space in
the attic, immediately under the roof. |
|
Cripples |
Cut-off framing members
above and below windows. |
|
Door Buck |
The rough frame of a door.
|
|
Dormer |
The projecting frame of a
recess in a sloping roof. |
|
Double Glazing |
An insulating window pane
formed of two thicknesses of glass with a sealed air space between them. |
|
Double Hung Windows
|
Windows with an upperand
lower sash, each supported by cords and weights. |
|
Downspout Leader |
Downspout A spout or pipe
to carry rain water down from a roof or gutters. |
|
Cripples |
A pipe for conducting
rainwater from the roof to a cistern or to the ground by way of a downspout. |
|
Downspout Strap |
A piece of metal which
secures the downspout to the eaves or wall of a building. |
|
Drip |
The projecting part of a
cornice which sheds rain water. |
|
Dry Wall |
A wall surface of
plasterboard or material other than plaster. |
|
Fascia |
A flat horizontal member
of a cornice placed in a vertical position. |
|
Fill-Type Insulation
|
Loose insulating material
which is applied by hand or blown into wall spaces mechanically. |
|
Flashing |
Noncorrosive metal used
around angles or junctions in roofs and exterior walls to prevent leaks. |
|
Floor Joists |
Framing pieces which rest
on outer foundation walls and interior beams or girders. |
|
Flue |
A passageway in a chimney
for conveying smoke, gases or fumes to the outside air. |
|
Footing |
Concrete base on which a
foundation sits. |
|
Foundation |
Lower parts of walls on
which the structure is built. Foundation walls of masonry or concrete are
mainly below ground level. |
|
Framing |
The rough lumber of a
house-joists, studs, rafters, and beams. |
|
Furring |
Thin wood, or metal
applied to a wall to level the surface for lathing, boarding, or plastering,
to create an insulating air space, and to damp proof the wall. |
|
Fuse |
A short plug in an
electric panel box which opens (breaks) an electrical circuit when it
becomes overloaded. |
|
Gable |
The triangular part of a
wall under the inverted "v" of the roof line. |
|
Gambrel Roof |
A roof with two pitches,
designed to provide more space on upper floors. The roof is steeper on its
lower slope and flatter toward the ridge. |
|
Girder |
A main member in a framed
floor supporting the joists which carry the flooring boards. It carries the
weight of a floor or partition. |
|
Glazing |
Fitting glass into windows
or doors. |
|
Grade Line |
The point at which the
ground rests against the foundation wall. |
|
Green Lumber |
Lumber which has been
inadequately dried and which tends to warp or "bleed" resin. |
|
Grounds |
Pieces of wood embedded in
plaster of walls to which skirtings are attached. Also wood pieces used to
stop the plaster work around doors and windows. |
|
Gusset |
A brace or bracket used to
strengthen a structure. |
|
Gutter |
A channel at the eaves for
conveying away rain water. |
|
Lag-Screws or Coach-Screws
|
Large, heavy screws, used
where great strength is required, as in heavy framing or when attaching
ironwork to wood. |
|
Lally Column |
A steel tube sometimes
filled with concrete, used to support girders or other floor beams. |
|
Lath |
One of a number of thin
narrow strips of wood nailed to rafters, ceiling joists, wall studs, etc. to
make a groundwork or key for slates, tiles, or plastering. |
|
Leaching Bed |
Tiles in the trenches
carrying treated wastes from septic tanks. |
|
Ledger |
A piece of wood which is
attached to a beam to support joists. |
|
Lintel |
The top piece over a door
or window which supports walls above the opening. |
|
Load-Bearing Wall |
A strong wall capable of
supporting weight. |
|
Louver |
An opening with horizontal
slats to permit passage of air, but excluding rain, sunlight and view. |
|
Parging |
A rough coat of mortar
applied over a masonry wall as protection or finish; may also serve as a
base for an asphaltic waterproofing compound below grade. |
|
Pilaster |
A projection or the
foundation wall used to support a floor girder or stiffen the wall.
|
|
Pitch |
The angle of slope of a
roof. |
|
Plasterboard (See Dry Wall) |
Gypsum board, used instead
of plaster. |
|
Plates |
Pieces of wood placed on
wall surfaces as fastening devices. The bottom member of the wall is the
sole plate and the top member is the rafter plate. |
|
Plenum |
A chamber which can serve
as a distribution area for heating or cooling systems, generally between a
false ceiling and the actual ceiling. |
|
Pointing |
Treatment of joints in
masonry by filling with mortar to improve appearance or protect against
weather. |
|
Post-And-Beam Construction |
Wall construction in which
beams are supported by heavy posts rather than many smaller studs.
|
|
Prefabrication |
Construction of components
such as walls, trusses, or doors, before delivery to the building site. |
|
Rabbet |
A groove cut in a board to
receive another board. |
|
Radiant Heat |
Coils of electricity, hot
water or steam pipes embedded in floors, ceilings, or walls to heat rooms. |
|
Rafter |
One of a series of
structural roof members spanning from an exterior wall to a center ridge
beam or ridge board. |
|
Reinforced Concrete
|
Concrete strengthened with
wire or metal bars. |
|
Ridge Pole |
A thick longitudinal plank
to which the ridge rafters of a roof are attached. |
|
Riser |
The upright piece of a
stair step, from tread to tread. |
|
Roof Sheathing |
Sheets, usually of
plywood, which are nailed to the top edges of trusses or rafters to tie the
roof together and support the roofing material. |
|
Sandwich Panel |
A panel with plastic,
paper, or other material enclosed between two layers of a different
material. |
|
Sash |
The movable part of a
window-the frame in which panes of glass are set in a window or door. |
|
Scotia |
A concave molding. |
|
Scuttle Hole |
A small opening either to
the attic, to the crawl space or to the plumbing pipes. |
|
Seepage Pit |
A sewage disposal system
composed of a septic tank and a connected cesspool. |
|
Septic Tank |
A sewage settling tank in
which part of the sewage is converted into gas and sludge before the
remaining waste is discharged by gravity into a leaching bed underground. |
|
Shakes |
Handcut wood shingles. |
|
Sheathing (See Wall Sheathing)
|
The first covering of
boards or material on the outside wall or roof prior to installing the
finished siding or roof covering. |
|
Shim |
Thin tapered piece of wood
used for leveling or tightening a stair or other building element. |
|
Shingles |
Pieces of wood, asbestos
or other material used as an overlapping outer covering on walls or roofs. |
|
Shiplap |
Boards with rabbeted edges
overlapping. |
|
Shiplap |
Siding Boards of special
design nailed horizontally to vertical studs with or without intervening
sheathing to form the exposed surface of outside walls of frame buildings. |
|
Sill Plate |
The lowest member of the
house framing resting on top of the foundation wall. Also called the mud
sill. |
|
Skirtings |
Narrow boards around the
margin of a floor; baseboards. |
|
Slab |
Concrete floor placed
directly on earth or a gravel base and usually about four inches thick.
|
|
Sleeper |
Strip of wood laid over
concrete floor to which the finished wood floor is nailed or glued. |
|
Soffit |
The visible underwide of
structural members such as staircases, cornices, beams, a roof overhang or
eave. |
|
Softwood |
Easily worked wood or wood
from a conebearing tree. |
|
Soil Stack |
Vertical plumbing pipe for
waste water. |
|
Stringer |
A long, horizontal member
which connects uprights in a frame or supports a floor or the like. One of
the enclosed sides of a stair supporting the treads and risers. |
|
Studs |
In wall framing, the
vertical members to which horizontal pieces are nailed. Studs are spaced
either 16 inches or 24 inches apart. |
|
Subfloor |
Usually, plywood sheets
that are nailed directly to the floor joists and that receive the finish
flooring. |
|
Sump |
A pit in the basement in
which water collects to be pumped out with a sump pump. |
|
Swale |
A wide shallow depression
in the ground to form a channel for storm water drainage. |
|
Tie |
A wood member which binds
a pair of principal rafters at the bottom. |
|
Tile Field |
Open-joint drain tiles
laid to distribute septic tank effluent over an absorption area or to
provide subsoil drainage in wet areas. |
|
Toenail |
Driving nails at an angle
into corners or other joints. |
|
Tongue-And-Groove |
Carpentry joint in which
the jutting edge of one board fits into the grooved end of a similar board. |
|
Trap |
A bend in a water pipe to
hold water so gases will not escape from the plumbing system into the house. |
|
Tread |
The horizontal part of a
stair step. |
|
Truss |
A combination of
structural members usually arranged in triangular units to form a rigid
framework for spanning between load-bearing walls. |