To be clear I wasn't commenting about the aesthetics of painted brick, but painted brick is directly related to the discussion we are having. The reason it is related is that the paint causes deterioration of the brick underneath often leading the building owner to search for another siding solution because the brick facade becomes pocked and uneaven as the paint flakes off. That siding solution is now commonly EIFS. In otherwords there is somewhat of a progression from brick, to painted brick, to EIFS.
OK fair enough, and I agree.
In that context though, say if I inherited a painted brick building that was in bad condition, my two options would either be to tear it down, or to reface it with EIFS. I would never do EIFS if the brick was in good condition, of course.
Either option would incur the wrath of deep though, not that it's any of his/her business.
Re-bricking is another siding option however there are two main problems: First, it is the most expensive option
Yep.
Second for many of the older buildings that thedeepend is concerned about the brick is not just a facade, it is the structure. Older houses and brick buildings are actually brick buildings. They are not timber frame buildings clad in brick such as your typical brick structure built since the 1950's. There are however more and better services available now to refresh and rejuvinate brick including brick repair, historical mortar mix, and even brick staining (to match uneven mis-matched brick repairs).
My house was not originally timber frame, and it was built in the 50s. It was a post-war brick bungalow with a lot of cinderblock.
The brick exterior was eventually covered with foam insulation and cedar siding.
My downtown townhouse before that was wood frame with a brick exterior, but it was built in the 90s.
Oh yea, EIFS is right up there with the moon landing and the mapping of the Human Genome.
Yeah, just as a crappy 50s brick bungalow is right up there with the Taj Mahal.
OMG, a random picture from who knows where with a building that that has problems and it isn't brick! You should call The Star right now.