Calcium Silicate Bricks Hannibal MO

When architects in Hannibal design with brick, light or dark earth tones don't have to be their only color options. Calcium silicate bricks have a natural near-white color, with a yellow, gray, or pink tint, depending on the color of the sand used to make them.

Local Companies

Hannibal Tool Rental Center Llc
(573) 221-6565
2475 Warren Barrett Dr
Hannibal, MO
Sunbelt Rentals
(314) 344-4443
Bridgeton, MO
Family Center the
(573) 756-7101
Highway 67 & Jct K H
Bonne Terre, MO
U.S. Rents-It
(573) 449-0068
Columbia, MO
Leasing Solutions Inc
(636) 285-8865
6930 Timberline Dr
House Springs, MO
American Legion Building Rental
(573) 256-1068
Columbia, MO
Koppco Inc
(314) 909-9300
820 S Fillmore Ave
Saint Louis, MO
Rent-A-Center
(417) 782-4620
1651 W 7th St Ste 9
Joplin, MO
Superior Rents & Sales Inc
(417) 777-8665
314 S Market Ave
Bolivar, MO
Industrial Capital Group
(636) 916-5200
1550 Wall St
Saint Charles, MO

Provided By:

Source: Masonry Construction
Publication date: September 1, 1988

By George M. Forster

Abstract: When architects design with brick, light or dark earth tones don't have to be their only color options. Calcium silicate bricks have a natural near-white color, with a yellow, gray, or pink tint, depending on the color of the sand used to make them. With pigments, they can be made in light pastel colors, even greens and blues. If the architect desires, the bricks can be made with a second color streaked through them. Or they can be dipped in acid after hardening to intensify their color.

What is Calcium silicate masonry? Calcium silicate masonry units are made from sand or other siliceous material and a little lime. The moistened mixture is pressed in a mold by a special hydraulic press, then cured in a steam-heated autoclave at 400 degrees Fahrenheit for up to 8 hours. In the autoclave, the lime reacts chemically with the silica to form hydrated calcium silicate, a powerful, durable cementing agent that binds the sand particles.

Many shapes, textures, and sizes in addition to its many colors, this brick can be pressed into a variety of shapes, including interlocking tongue and groove units, single and double bullnose, chamfers, and squint styles. Their surfaces usually are uniform and smooth. Texture is obtained by sandblasting, mechanical brushing, or adding flint aggregates to the mix.

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