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Book Review: Mortars, Renders and Plasters

Book Review: Mortars, Renders and Plasters

Mor­tar­s, Ren­ders and Plas­ter­s is an ex­ten­si­ve read lea­ding through ma­te­ri­a­ls and his­to­ry of use, de­te­ri­o­ra­ti­on and da­ma­ge, as­sess­ment, tre­at­ment and re­pair, and en­ding with care and main­te­nance. Sin­ce it seems that the au­t­hors ai­med for a com­pre­hen­si­ve stu­dy, rea­ders will also find very in­tri­gu­i­ng in­tro­duc­to­ry in­for­ma­ti­on on na­tu­ral ce­ment­s, floors and ru­ins in the chap­ter on spe­ci­al to­pics.

This book edi­ted by Ali­son Hen­ry and John Ste­wart is ac­tu­al­ly a new edi­ti­on of the book with the same name writ­ten in 1988 by John and Ni­co­la As­hurst. The new vo­lu­me, part of the 10­-­vo­lu­me Prac­ti­cal Buil­ding Con­ser­va­ti­on Se­ries, con­tains plen­ty of up­da­ted in­for­ma­ti­on and main­tains the de­li­ca­te ba­lan­ce bet­ween in­struc­ti­ve il­lus­tra­ti­ons and well­-­struc­tu­red pa­ra­graphs. Just like its pre­de­ces­sor, its am­bi­ti­on is to ser­ve as the re­fe­rence on mor­ta­r­-­re­la­ted to­pics and I be­lie­ve it ful­ly suc­ceeds. The­re is, ho­we­ver, so­me­thing else which ma­kes this book spe­cia­l: the light­ness of the wri­ting style con­vey­ing the strong con­tent lea­ves the fee­ling that the au­t­hors tru­ly en­joy­ed re­a­li­zing the pro­ject through.

In about 600 pa­ges the book gi­ves a com­pre­hen­si­ve his­to­ri­cal con­tex­t, strong tech­ni­cal in­for­ma­ti­on and – last but not le­ast – con­tent high­ly re­le­vant to prac­ti­ce and ap­p­li­ca­ti­o­n.­The chap­ters are care­ful­ly ar­ran­ged but at the same time could func­ti­on au­to­no­mous­ly. The de­s­crip­ti­ons are sha­rp and the ter­mi­no­lo­gy pre­ci­se; and, most im­port­ant­ly, the wri­ting is ac­ces­si­ble. In the chap­ter­s’ sub­sec­ti­ons, tech­ni­ques and other par­ti­cu­lar in­for­ma­ti­on are pe­ri­odi­cal­ly brought for­ward, such as the de­ter­mi­na­ti­on of par­tic­le size dis­tri­bu­ti­on or the re­mo­val of graf­fi­ti. Co­lou­red links in­di­ca­te when cer­tain to­pics are dis­cus­sed in depth in an­o­ther vo­lume of the se­ries. To give the rea­der a di­rec­ti­on to con­ti­nue the jour­ney, each chap­ter ends with a fur­ther rea­ding sec­ti­on pro­vi­ding cru­ci­al pu­bli­ca­ti­ons of the last two de­ca­des.

Mor­tar­s, Ren­ders and Plas­ters is the book I nee­ded to read du­ring my stu­dies: it pro­vi­des plen­ty of in­sights and hel­ps struc­ture stu­dent­s’ know­led­ge at an ea­r­ly sta­ge of pro­fes­si­o­nal de­ve­lop­ment. Alt­hough I per­so­nal­ly gra­dua­ted in 2012 be­fo­re this pu­bli­ca­ti­on was re­le­a­se­d, lucki­ly one is ne­ver too far along to get some facts straight. Fur­ther­mo­re, this is an im­port­ant sour­ce for the state of the art in the field. Some prac­ti­ti­o­ners will cer­tain­ly have dif­fe­rent opi­ni­ons on parts of the vo­lu­me; ne­vert­he­less the­re is no au­t­ho­ri­ta­ti­ve al­ter­na­ti­ve to this boo­k!