Architectural Details: 8 Extruded Brick Façades

The architects behind these projects rotated, stacked, extruded and recessed bricks to create a new sense of depth and rhythm in each façade.

Eric Baldwin Eric Baldwin

The latest edition of “Architizer: The World’s Best Architecture” — a stunning, hardbound book celebrating the most inspiring contemporary architecture from around the globe — is now available. Order your copy today.  

Few lessons in architecture are as fundamental as learning to detail a brick façade. As a material that dates back thousands of years, bricks are fundamental building materials across the world. Both economical and enduring, bricks are available in a seemingly endless range of textures, sizes and colors, and can be blended in brickwork techniques with different bond and courses. Today, protruding or projected brick details are increasingly used to create unique patterns on building envelopes. These extruded brick forms require careful detailing to avoid compromising durability through rain penetration or differential movement.

Projections are designed depending on the brick type and exposure, and taking into consideration mortar fillets, frogs and perforations. Showcasing a range of projection degrees, the following collection includes brickwork that’s rotated, stacked, extruded and recessed. Adding texture and relief to each façade, the bricks are joined together using snap headers, stretchers and diverse ties. They play with light and shadow to transform exterior surfaces into dynamic façades that stand out and make a statement.

© Avenier Cornejo Architectes

© Avenier Cornejo Architectes

© Avenier Cornejo Architectes

© Avenier Cornejo Architectes

38 Housing Units by Avenier Cornejo Architectes, Clichy, France

Setting a new standard for integrating landscape with the suburbs, 38 Housing Units creates morphological diversity through its form and envelope. Brick was chosen for the north and west façades, where vibrant colors and elegant detailing were used to create patterns extruded from the face of the brick.

© Junsekino Architecture & Design

© Junsekino Architecture & Design

© Junsekino Architecture & Design

© Junsekino Architecture & Design

Ngamwongwan House by Junsekino Architecture & Design, Bangkok, Thailand

Exploring the common and everyday application of brick, this house embraces a tropical lifestyle with a brick screen façade and two-layer brick walls that let in natural light. As a collaboration between the architect and a local artisan, bricks in the façade were rotated to stand proud of the envelope and create a repeating vertical pattern.

© TROPICAL SPACE

© TROPICAL SPACE

© TROPICAL SPACE

© TROPICAL SPACE

Termitary House by TROPICAL SPACE, Da Nang, Vietnam

Instead of rotating the brickwork, in the Termitary House entire bricks were extruded from the outer skin of the double façade. The bricks have absorptive capacity to help regulate the humidity of the house, and their color changes under the tropical sunlight.

© Edmund Sumner

© Edmund Sumner

© Michael Franke

© Michael Franke

Hindmans Yard by Foster Lomas, London, United Kingdom

As four high-performance houses formed on a backland site, the Hindmans Yard features brick cladding to subtly contrast its surroundings. The project was made with brick tooling details to echo the nearby Victorian terraces. The rotated technique staggers bricks atop one another at a 45-degree angle to create a rippling façade pattern.

© Mariano Molina Arquitecto

© Mariano Molina Arquitecto

© Mariano Molina Arquitecto

© Mariano Molina Arquitecto

Single family house in Molino de la Hoz by Mariano Molina Iniesta, arquitecto, Las Rozas, Spain

Utilizing continuous and thin brickwork, the design of this single-family home stacks handmade bricks above a granulated concrete ground level. Brick lattices and extrusions were created to play with light, volume and form. A detail of the extruded brickwork can be seen on a corner where the staggered bricks are half secured with mortar.

© MICHAN ARCHITECTURE

© MICHAN ARCHITECTURE

© MICHAN ARCHITECTURE

© MICHAN ARCHITECTURE

Social Housing Z53 by MAPmx studio, Azcapotzalco, Mexico

Masonry brick walls play an important role in this social housing project, where they are reinterpreted to blur the boundaries between structure and ornament. Exploring light, pattern and rhythm, the façade uses a single red mud brick unit with multiple mutation details to form an undulating aesthetic.

© Richard Barnes

© Richard Barnes

© Richard Barnes

© Richard Barnes

Center For Jewish Life, Drexel University by Stanley Saitowitz / Natoma Architects, Philadelphia, Pa., United States

Sheathed in a local, textured red brick façade, the Hillel House translates into an abstract menorah that terraces down the street. By day, light reflects on woven brick notches; by night, light shines from within. The extruded bricks create a play between shadow and form to echo the acts of gathering and emanating light.

© L Architects

© L Architects

© L Architects

© L Architects

A Series of Barns by L Architects, Johor, Malaysia

Located near the coast of the Johor straits across from Singapore, this adaptive reuse project combines metal decking lines, green walls, transparent glass and patterned brickwork. The modular brick scheme created a texturized façade with protruded bricks that create a gradient on the building’s surface.

The latest edition of “Architizer: The World’s Best Architecture” — a stunning, hardbound book celebrating the most inspiring contemporary architecture from around the globe — is now available. Order your copy today.  

Eric Baldwin Author: Eric Baldwin
Based in New York City, Eric was trained in both architecture and communications. As Director of Communications at Sasaki, he has a background spanning media, academia, and practice. He's deeply committed to trying as many restaurants as possible in NYC.
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