LogoTUCKPOINT

Chicago Historic Masonry · Est. 2008

Your building has a story. The mortar is forgetting it.

Restored red brick facade at 2341 N Kedzie Blvd, 1908 building with tight lime putty joints

Logan Square

2341 N Kedzie Blvd

Built 1908 · Full facade repointing

Historic Chicago brick building facade restored at 1847 S Halsted, 1914 construction

Pilsen

1847 S Halsted St

Built 1914 · Chimney rebuild & tuckpointing

Landmarked commercial building at 1620 N Milwaukee Avenue with restored Flemish bond brickwork

Wicker Park

1620 N Milwaukee Ave

Built 1922 · Landmark spec repointing

Pre-1920 brick six-flat at 3304 S Halsted with repaired spalling and fresh mortar joints

Bridgeport

3304 S Halsted St

Built 1903 · Spalling repair & repointing

Victorian-era brick residence at 5238 S Blackstone Avenue after efflorescence removal and repointing

Hyde Park

5238 S Blackstone Ave

Built 1896 · Efflorescence treatment

Pre-war six-flat apartment building at 3512 W Division Street with restored mortar joints

Humboldt Park

3512 W Division St

Built 1911 · Six-flat facade restoration

Completed Restorations

Hover pins to view project

340+

Projects

18

Neighborhoods

1896

Oldest Build

Serving Chicago's historic districts since 2008. Licensed, insured, and approved for landmark commission work.

Crumblingmortardoesn'tjustlookbad.Itletswaterin.Waterfreezes.Brickscrack.Onewinterbecomesaviolationletter.Westopthatclock.

Restoration Archive

Three walls.
Three winters survived.

Each project below is a complete record — the damage, the specification, the work, and the outcome. Read them in sequence. By the third one, you'll know exactly what your building needs.

Residential · Chimney · Case 1 of 3

The Wicker Park Chimney

1620 N Leavitt St

Built 1908 · Wicker Park


The homeowner had received a city violation notice: mortar joints on the chimney had eroded to ½" depth, and two courses of brick were bowing outward. The stack hadn't been touched since 1974.

Mortar Specification

Type O lime putty (1:3 lime:sand), matched to original 1908 gray-buff color. No Portland cement — it would crack the surrounding brick.

Bond Pattern

Running bond, common to Chicago residential construction of this era.

On-Site Duration

4 days on scaffold

Step 1

Damage Assessment

Probe testing revealed joints eroded 5/8" deep on the south face — the worst exposure. Two bricks showed active spalling.

Close-up of deteriorated chimney mortar joints showing deep erosion and spalling brick on 1908 Wicker Park building

Step 2

Mortar Grinding

Angle grinder with 4" diamond blade removed old mortar to 3/4" depth without touching the brick face. Dust extraction on every pass.

Masonry worker grinding out deteriorated mortar joints with angle grinder on historic Chicago chimney

Step 3

Lime Putty Application

Three-pass technique: scratch coat, float coat, finish. Each layer cured 24 hours before the next. The putty was pre-mixed 6 months prior for proper carbonation.

Tuckpointing worker pressing fresh lime putty mortar into cleaned chimney joints with pointing tool

Step 4

Final Reveal

Tight, flush joints matching the original profile. The bowing course was stabilized. Violation letter dismissed within 30 days.

Completed chimney restoration on 1908 Wicker Park building showing fresh lime mortar joints matching original profile

30 days

Violation dismissed


Next Case
Multi-Unit · Six-Flat · Case 2 of 3

The Pilsen Six-Flat

1847 S Halsted St

Built 1914 · Pilsen


The property manager had deferred maintenance for three winters. Efflorescence had bloomed across the entire north face, and two window sills were actively crumbling. The building's brick was Chicago common — soft, porous, and completely incompatible with modern Portland cement mortars.

Mortar Specification

Type K lime putty (1:2.5:10 Portland:lime:sand), extremely soft formulation to protect the fragile Chicago common brick from differential movement cracking.

Bond Pattern

English bond on the ground floor, running bond above — original to the 1914 construction.

On-Site Duration

12 days on scaffold

Step 1

Facade Mapping

Every joint was rated 1–4 for erosion depth. 38% of the north face required full repointing. The south face only needed spot repairs.

Property manager and mason surveying deteriorated brick facade of 1914 Chicago six-flat apartment building

Step 2

Scaffold & Prep

Full-height scaffold on the north and west faces. Brick was pre-wetted before grinding to prevent dust migration into interior walls.

Scaffolding erected on north face of historic Pilsen apartment building for tuckpointing work

Step 3

Sill Replacement

Three limestone sills were replaced with salvaged period-appropriate stone sourced from a Bridgeport demolition site. Original profile matched exactly.

Masons replacing deteriorated limestone window sills on 1914 Pilsen six-flat with salvaged period stone

Step 4

Completed Facade

The efflorescence was removed, all joints repointed to original depth, and the English bond pattern on the ground floor is legible again for the first time in decades.

Fully restored north facade of 1914 Pilsen six-flat showing clean brick and tight mortar joints after tuckpointing

$0

Structural repairs avoided


Next Case
Landmark · Commercial · Case 3 of 3

The Logan Square Greystone

2341 N Kedzie Blvd

Built 1903 · Logan Square


A preservation architect was preparing a landmark commission application for this 1903 commercial greystone. The commission required documentation of original mortar composition and a repointing specification using historically accurate materials. The building had been patched with incompatible Portland cement in the 1980s — the worst possible intervention.

Mortar Specification

Hot lime putty (non-hydraulic), matched via spectrographic analysis to original 1903 mortar samples. Sand aggregate sourced from the same St. Peter formation used by Chicago masons in the period.

Bond Pattern

Flemish bond throughout — alternating headers and stretchers. Every course had to be documented photographically for the commission review.

On-Site Duration

22 days on scaffold

Step 1

Mortar Analysis

Core samples sent to a historic preservation lab. The 1903 mortar was 98% lime, 2% hydraulic additive — a formula we had to source from a single specialty supplier in Vermont.

Historic mortar core samples from 1903 Logan Square greystone being analyzed for preservation specification

Step 2

Portland Removal

The 1980s Portland patches had to be removed by hand with cold chisels — no power tools. Portland is harder than the surrounding limestone and any vibration risked spalling the original stone.

Masonry worker carefully removing incompatible Portland cement patches by hand chisel from 1903 greystone facade

Step 3

Commission Documentation

Every phase photographed with scale references. The Flemish bond pattern was catalogued course by course, and a written specification was submitted to the Commission on Chicago Landmarks.

Preservation architect documenting Flemish bond pattern on 1903 Logan Square greystone for landmark commission review

Step 4

Landmark Approval

The commission approved the landmark designation. The repointing specification is now the standard of record for this building in perpetuity.

Completed landmark restoration of 1903 Logan Square greystone with hot lime putty joints and documented Flemish bond pattern

Approved

Landmark designation

Free Mortar Assessment

Check Your Mortar

Five questions. Two minutes. You'll know your mortar condition grade and the right service tier before we ever set foot on your property.

1
Upload Photo
2
Building Era
3
Bond Pattern
4
Damage Type
5
Your Address

Step 1 of 5

Upload a close-up of your worst joint

Why this matters: The joint depth and erosion pattern tells us which mortar type was used originally — and whether it's compatible with modern repair materials.

Why It Matters Who You Hire

The wrong mortar
destroys the brick.

Portland cement mortar is harder than historic brick. When it's used to repoint a pre-1940 building, the brick — not the mortar — takes the stress of thermal expansion. The result is spalling, cracking, and structural damage that costs 10x more to fix than the original repointing would have.

We use soft lime putty mortars that move with the building. The joints fail before the brick does. That's the whole point.

Commission on Chicago Landmarks

Approved contractor for landmark-designated properties

Illinois DCEO Licensed

Masonry contractor license #MC-047832

Natural Lime Putty Certified

Trained in hot lime and hydraulic lime specification by the National Lime Association

Preservation Briefs Compliant

All work follows Secretary of the Interior's Standards for the Treatment of Historic Properties

$2M General Liability

Fully insured for residential and commercial properties

No Portland on Pre-1940 Brick

We refuse work that would damage historic masonry — in writing, on every contract

Materials We Actually Use

St. Astier NHL 2

Soft pre-1920 brick

Source: France

Singleton Birch Putty

Period lime putty

Source: UK

Sil-co-sil 52 Sand

St. Peter formation match

Source: Illinois

Baumit Restoration Plaster

Efflorescence treatment

Source: Austria

From the Buildings We've Saved
"

The violation letter had been sitting on my desk for eight months. Tuckpoint matched the original 1908 mortar exactly — the inspector signed off in one visit.

MK

Margaret Kowalski

Homeowner, Wicker Park

"

I've specified lime putty repointing on six landmark projects in Chicago. Tuckpoint is the only crew I've found that actually understands the Secretary of the Interior's Standards.

DO

Darnell Okafor

Preservation Architect, FAIA

"

Three buildings, two winters, zero call-backs. The joints they put in look like they've been there since 1914. Because the mortar they used has been around that long.

SP

Svetlana Petrov

Property Manager, 14 units

Your building is waiting

Every winter without repointing is a decision.

Water finds the weakest joint. Freeze-thaw cycles do the rest. The masonry your building was born with can still be there in 2125 — if the mortar is right.

(312) 555-0190

Free on-site assessment within 48 hours · No obligation