Copyright  Goodheart-Willcox  Co.,  Inc.  240  Section  4  Techniques  12.3.4  Laying  an  8″,  Two  Wythe  Intersecting  Brick  Wall  Intersecting  brick  walls  are  often  necessary  in  the  con-  struction  of  brick  structures.  The  walls  are  laid  out  so  the  courses  are  tied  together  to  form  an  integrated  unit.  Individual  units  are  placed  so  they  interlock  the  wall  segments  together.  Reinforcement  ties  (Z  ties)  are  gen-  erally  used.  The  following  procedure  can  be  used  to  construct  an  8″,  two  wythe  intersecting  brick  wall  in  standard  run-  ning  bond  with  joints  broken  so  they  do  not  line  up  ver-  tically.  Refer  to  the  numbered  bricks  in  Figure  12-48.  P  R  O  C  E  D  U  R  E  Laying  an  8″,  Two  Wythe  Intersecting  Brick  Wall  1.  Locate  the  face  of  the  walls  on  the  floor  and  snap  a  chalk  line  to  preserve  the  location.  2.  Lay  out  the  first  course  using  no  mortar  (dry  bond)  to  maintain  proper  spacing  and  identify  any  difficulties  or  problems.  3.  Spread  the  mortar  bed  and  lay  out  the  face  wythe  beginning  with  brick  #1  through  brick  #2  in  Figure  12-48.  Level,  align,  and  plumb  the  course  of  brick.  4.  Lay  the  backing  wythe  beginning  with  brick  #3  and  continuing  with  brick  #4.  Do  not  forget  to  butter  the  back  side  of  each  brick  where  the  backing  wythe  sits  against  the  face  course.  This  joint  (collar  joint)  should  be  completely  filled.  Level,  align,  and  plumb  the  course  and  check  the  wall  thickness.  5.  Lay  the  intersecting  wall  brick  beginning  with  brick  #5  and  then  brick  #6,  running  each  course  to  the  outside  wall.  Level,  align,  and  plumb  each  course  and  check  the  wall  thickness.  This  completes  the  first  course  plan.  Second  course  First  course  Pictorial  view  1  3  2  4  6  5  Goodheart-Willcox  Publisher  Figure  12-48.  The  procedure  for  laying  an  8″,  two-wythe  intersecting  brick  wall.  
