Masonry All Around

Words: Paul Odom

I went to New York City in early April to see Susie who has been babysitting our 4 ½-month-old granddaughter for our son Alex and our daughter Kelsey.

As a mason when I travel I am always looking at masonry buildings. NYC is an amazing place to see the beauty of masonry. There are masonry buildings around every corner that were built not only for the beauty but for sustainability and fire safety for both the property and the occupants.

For example, the Potter Building #1 at 37th Park Row, burned to the ground in 1882 with twelve people killed. The flames had engulfed the structure so quickly that the Fireman’s Herald wrote that the building “made itself notorious the country over for burning up in the shortest time on record”, and its owner was brought before a grand jury.

Potter immediately set forth to rebuild. He commissioned architect Norris Garshom Starkweather, whose offices had been in the burnt-out building, to design its replacement. Within two weeks of the fire, Potter announced he would build the largest office building in New York and it would be “absolutely fireproof inside as well as outside.” The Potter Building was completed in 1886 with brick, terra cotta and iron.

I am always proud to be a mason but even more so when I see beautiful masonry that is built to last. It is my wish that we can all work together to continue to promote masonry. It is SAFE, it is sustainable, and it looks good for years. As you travel around the country or world for that matter, look at the old buildings. Masonry is what is still around!!

Until next month.

GEN NXT: Mason Paolini
May 2026

This month, the MCAA got to talk with Mason Paolini, a mason who has a clear passion and talent for the trade he has such high praise for. Read about Mason’s story and why he sees a future in this industry. Mason Paolini’s career began with a simple desi

Marvelous Masonry: Tianjin Zhongshuge Library
May 2026

It is not unusual today for masonry to be treated as a surface decision rather than a structural one. Too often, brick enters a project late in the process, trimmed back by budgets or reduced to a veneer once the “real” building work is finished. The Tian

Fechino Files: Concrete Pavers around a Pool
May 2026

Many folks over the years have placed concrete pavers around their pool as a nice form of decorative pool deck. Early in the 2000’s, I took a class held by the Interlocking Concrete Paver Institute, then known as the ICPI. At the time I attended the class

Chairman's Message: Staying the Course
May 2026

Spring is one of my favorite times of year. There’s energy in the air. Jobs are picking up. Crews are hitting their rhythm. Schedules are filling up. You can feel momentum building again. And every year around this time, I find myself thinking about con