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Brick vs. stone vs. fiber-cement for a partial front accent. Worth the cost?

Asked 3 weeks ago.
Active 2 weeks ago.
Viewed 4 times.
  • facade
  • masonry
  • materials
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Our builder priced a stone veneer accent across the lower third of the front elevation and it's a big chunk of the budget. He says it's the single biggest curb appeal upgrade. Part of me wonders if a good fiber-cement or a brick slip would get 80% of the look for half the money.

For those who've done it: does a partial masonry accent actually pay off, and how do you decide where it should start and stop so it doesn't look stuck on?

asked 3 weeks ago
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304The Red Gorilla
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Partial masonry pays off when it follows the architecture and looks like garbage when it doesn't. The rule I give clients: terminate stone or brick on an inside corner or a full height element like a column, never in the middle of a flat wall. A band that just stops mid-field reads as fake.

On material: manufactured stone veneer and a quality brick slip both look great installed well. Fiber-cement panels are a different language, more modern. So your choice should follow the house style, not just the price.

answered 3 weeks ago
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309Carmen Gordon
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Agree on the termination point, that's the whole game. On payoff: a well-placed masonry base is one of the few exterior upgrades appraisers and buyers actually notice, so I rarely talk people out of it. I do talk them out of wrapping it everywhere, restraint reads as expensive.

answered 3 weeks ago
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358Meinhard Kowalske
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Before you spend a dollar, mock it up visually. The "where does it start and stop" question is impossible to answer in your head and trivial to answer with a picture.

I had this exact debate with a client last month, we generated the same elevation with full stone, lower-third stone, and a single column wrap using this facade design tool, put them next to each other, and the lower-third version won unanimously in about thirty seconds. Cheaper than discovering it after the mason leaves.

answered 2 weeks ago
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475Marsha Vaughn
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