![]() ![]() ![]() So with today’s appeal of mid-century modern style, it is little wonder that the use of decorative concrete blocks in all their forms has again become a popular and attractive solution for a modern garden.įinishes and designs for decorative concrete block walls are limited only by imagination and availability of products. Prior to World War II in Australia, concrete was seen as one of the key materials of modernism, along with stainless steel and glass (Aitken 2011). While the use of hollow and decorative concrete blocks occurred throughout the late 1800s and early 1900s it was the Californian textile block houses of the 1920s (including the Millard House and Ennis House) by Frank Lloyd Wright that propelled the material into use in modern architecture. This included smooth, raised margins, rock-faced or with other ornamentation to the face panel (Lewis 2015). The manufacture and use of hollow concrete blocks can be traced back to the 1860s in both the United States and Britain, where they were created as a more viable option than blocks of solid concrete.ĭevelopments in machinery to manufacture these blocks also lead to a range of finishes. ![]() Whether they are called breezeblocks, screen blocks, cinder blocks, textile blocks or even Besser blocks (here in Australia) the hollow concrete block has long been a popular construction material for both architecture and landscape. ![]()
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