Porosity before appearance
Dense, low-absorption stone such as many granites resists frost damage better than highly porous sandstone or soft limestone in saturated, freezing conditions.
Exterior Stone & Masonry
A reference on choosing exterior stone, sealing it correctly, and caring for masonry that has to survive repeated freezing and thawing across Canadian seasons.
What this covers
Material choice, surface protection, and seasonal maintenance work together. Get one wrong and the other two rarely compensate over a few hard winters.
Dense, low-absorption stone such as many granites resists frost damage better than highly porous sandstone or soft limestone in saturated, freezing conditions.
Vapour-permeable penetrating sealers let trapped moisture escape. Glossy film coatings can trap water behind the surface, which is the opposite of what a cold climate needs.
Standing water and chloride de-icers accelerate spalling at joints. Keeping water moving away from masonry matters more than any single product.
Reading the material
Damage rarely comes from cold alone. It comes from water that has soaked into pore spaces and then expands roughly nine percent as it freezes. Repeated cycles widen microcracks until surfaces flake, a process commonly called spalling.
Field notes
Each piece focuses on one stage of exterior stone work, with practical detail rather than general advice.
How absorption, density, and finish affect frost resistance, and where each common stone type tends to fail.
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Penetrating versus topical sealers, why vapour permeability matters, and how timing around weather affects the result.
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Spotting early spalling, choosing compatible mortar, and a seasonal routine for walls, steps, and paving.
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General background from public, authoritative sources on stone properties and weathering.
Contact
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