


▲ 55 r/Chattanooga
Bricks from 1890 or before
I purchased a property for my small business that has a house built in 1890 or before. We are cleaning up the collapsed chimney and I have at least three pallets of old clean bricks. Is this something someone would be interested in?
Sadly I will likely have to demo the house as well which was built with a construction technique called "balloon framing". It's essentially built with very large milled lumber(4"x6") instead of studs. I figured someone may be interested in those as well.
If anyone has any insight on what I should do with these cool old building materials please let me know!
u/Frosty-Humor7239 — 1 day ago