Confused by builder jargon?
Here’s our A-Z of the most common terms that customers ask us about, helping you follow plans, quotes and site updates with confidence. Each term is explained in plain English – no hard hats required.
Part 1 – Materials
Abutment – Where a roof meets a wall.
Aggregate – Crushed stone, gravel or sand mixed with cement to make concrete.
Airbrick – Ventilated brick allowing air under floors or into roof spaces.
Architrave – Decorative trim around a door or window.
Asbestos – Older insulation or fireproofing material; safe if untouched, hazardous if cut or drilled.
Ball Valve / Ballcock – Float valve controlling water flow into a cistern or tank.
Balustrade – Rail with posts beneath, beside stairs or balconies.
Batten – Thin timber strip supporting roof tiles or slates.
Bonnet Tile – Curved tile covering roof hips.
Casement Window – Window with hinged, pivoted or fixed sections.
Cladding – Non-structural outer wall or roof covering.
Conduit – Tube protecting electrical cables.
Consumer Unit – Main fuse board controlling a home’s electrical circuits.
Coping Stone – Cap on top of a wall to prevent water ingress, often concrete or stone.
Cornice / Coving – Moulded trim at the junction between a wall and the ceiling.
Cowl – Chimney cap preventing rain and allowing airflow.
Dado Rail – Mid-height wall trim or top of panelling.
Engineering Brick – Dense, hard brick used for strength or damp resistance.
Expansion Tank – Small loft tank allowing heating system overflow.
Fascia Board – a long, straight board that runs along the lower edge of a roof where it meets the exterior wall.
Flashing – Waterproof joint between a roof and wall.
Flue – Channel for air intake and fume outlet from fires or boilers.
Macerator – Aa device that grinds up waste and then pumps it through pipes to a drainage system.
Mastic – Flexible sealant used around joints or glazing.
Mortice Lock – Lock set into the edge of a door.
Newel – Main post supporting a stair handrail.
Padstone – Concrete or hard brick block used to spread weight from structural elements like steel beams.
Plasterboard – Sheet of plaster between paper layers used for walls or ceilings.
Plywood – Multi-layer board made from thin sheets glued with alternating grain.
Rodding Eye – Access point for clearing drain blockages.
Soffit – Underside of a roof overhang, beam or stair.
Soil Stack – Vertical waste pipe vented above roof.
Stopcock – Valve to shut off a water or gas supply.
Trap – U-shaped bend in waste pipes holding water to block smells.
Abutment – Where a roof meets a wall.
Aggregate – Crushed stone, gravel or sand mixed with cement to make concrete.
Airbrick – Ventilated brick allowing air under floors or into roof spaces.
Architrave – Decorative trim around a door or window.
Asbestos – Older insulation or fireproofing material; safe if untouched, hazardous if cut or drilled.
Ball Valve / Ballcock – Float valve controlling water flow into a cistern or tank.
Balustrade – Rail with posts beneath, beside stairs or balconies.
Batten – Thin timber strip supporting roof tiles or slates.
Bonnet Tile – Curved tile covering roof hips.
Casement Window – Window with hinged, pivoted or fixed sections.
Cladding – Non-structural outer wall or roof covering.
Conduit – Tube protecting electrical cables.
Consumer Unit – Main fuse board controlling a home’s electrical circuits.
Coping Stone – Cap on top of a wall to prevent water ingress, often concrete or stone.
Cornice / Coving – Moulded trim at the junction between a wall and the ceiling.
Cowl – Chimney cap preventing rain and allowing airflow.
Dado Rail – Mid-height wall trim or top of panelling.
Engineering Brick – Dense, hard brick used for strength or damp resistance.
Expansion Tank – Small loft tank allowing heating system overflow.
Fascia Board – a long, straight board that runs along the lower edge of a roof where it meets the exterior wall.
Flashing – Waterproof joint between a roof and wall.
Flue – Channel for air intake and fume outlet from fires or boilers.
Macerator – Aa device that grinds up waste and then pumps it through pipes to a drainage system.
Mastic – Flexible sealant used around joints or glazing.
Mortice Lock – Lock set into the edge of a door.
Newel – Main post supporting a stair handrail.
Padstone – Concrete or hard brick block used to spread weight from structural elements like steel beams.
Plasterboard – Sheet of plaster between paper layers used for walls or ceilings.
Plywood – Multi-layer board made from thin sheets glued with alternating grain.
Rodding Eye – Access point for clearing drain blockages.
Soffit – Underside of a roof overhang, beam or stair.
Soil Stack – Vertical waste pipe vented above roof.
Stopcock – Valve to shut off a water or gas supply.
Trap – U-shaped bend in waste pipes holding water to block smells.
Part 2 – Terminology
Benching / Haunching – Shaped concrete at the base of a drain chamber.
Bond – Brick or block laying pattern (e.g. English, Flemish).
Box Gutter – Square gutter behind a parapet wall.
Cold Roof – Roof where insulation sits below the structure.
Condensation – Water released by condensed moist air.
Course – Single horizontal layer of bricks, blocks or slates.
Damp-Proof Course / DPC – Waterproof layer in a wall stopping rising damp.
Damp-Proof Membrane – Waterproof sheet beneath floors or slabs.
Distemper – Old chalk-based paint finish.
Dormer Cheek – Side wall of a dormer window.
Drip – Groove stopping rainwater running down a wall.
Dry Rot – Wood fungus found in damp, unventilated areas.
Eaves – Lower overhang edge of a roof.
Foundations – Concrete base supporting a building.
French Drain – Gravel trench draining water from walls.
Frog – Hollow in a brick’s top face to save weight.
Gable – Triangular end wall of a pitched roof.
Heat Exchanger – a device which transfers heat between incoming (fresh) air and outgoing (humid) air.
Hip – Sloping junction where roof faces meet.
Hopper – Funnel head directing rainwater into downpipes.
HVAC – heating, ventilation, air conditioning: systems that control building’s temperature, humidity & air quality.
Inspection Chamber – “Manhole” giving access to underground drains.
Joist – Horizontal beam supporting a floor or ceiling.
Kerb – Raised edge on a flat roof beside a wall.
Lath – Narrow slats traditionally used as a base for plaster.
Lintel – Beam over an opening supporting wall above.
Load-Bearing – Structure carrying the weight above it.
Mullion – Vertical divider between window panes.
Oversite – Rough concrete layer below timber floors.
Parapet – Low wall at the edge of a roof or balcony.
Pier – Vertical column strengthening or supporting a wall.
Pointing – Finished mortar joints between bricks.
Purlin – Horizontal roof beam supporting rafters.
Rafter – Sloping timber forming the roof frame.
Reveal – Side face of a window or door opening.
Ridge – Apex or highest point of a roof.
Riser – Vertical part of a stair step.
Rising Damp – Moisture drawn up walls from the ground.
Roof Deck – Base boarding under a flat roof covering.
RSJ – Rolled Steel Joist, a stiff structural beam.
Screed – Smooth top layer over a concrete floor.
Scrim – Mesh tape covering plasterboard joints.
Soakaway – Underground pit letting rainwater soak into the ground.
String – Side of a staircase supporting treads and risers.
Stud Partition – Lightweight internal wall.
Transom – Horizontal divider in a window or above a door.
Tread – Flat step surface on stairs.
Trussed Rafters – Prefabricated triangular roof frames.
Underpinning – Used to strengthen weak foundations
Verge – Edge of a sloped roof over a gable.
Ventilation – Airflow preventing condensation and decay.
Wall Plate – Horizontal timber supporting joists.
Warm Roof – Roof with insulation above the structure.
Benching / Haunching – Shaped concrete at the base of a drain chamber.
Bond – Brick or block laying pattern (e.g. English, Flemish).
Box Gutter – Square gutter behind a parapet wall.
Cold Roof – Roof where insulation sits below the structure.
Condensation – Water released by condensed moist air.
Course – Single horizontal layer of bricks, blocks or slates.
Damp-Proof Course / DPC – Waterproof layer in a wall stopping rising damp.
Damp-Proof Membrane – Waterproof sheet beneath floors or slabs.
Distemper – Old chalk-based paint finish.
Dormer Cheek – Side wall of a dormer window.
Drip – Groove stopping rainwater running down a wall.
Dry Rot – Wood fungus found in damp, unventilated areas.
Eaves – Lower overhang edge of a roof.
Foundations – Concrete base supporting a building.
French Drain – Gravel trench draining water from walls.
Frog – Hollow in a brick’s top face to save weight.
Gable – Triangular end wall of a pitched roof.
Heat Exchanger – a device which transfers heat between incoming (fresh) air and outgoing (humid) air.
Hip – Sloping junction where roof faces meet.
Hopper – Funnel head directing rainwater into downpipes.
HVAC – heating, ventilation, air conditioning: systems that control building’s temperature, humidity & air quality.
Inspection Chamber – “Manhole” giving access to underground drains.
Joist – Horizontal beam supporting a floor or ceiling.
Kerb – Raised edge on a flat roof beside a wall.
Lath – Narrow slats traditionally used as a base for plaster.
Lintel – Beam over an opening supporting wall above.
Load-Bearing – Structure carrying the weight above it.
Mullion – Vertical divider between window panes.
Oversite – Rough concrete layer below timber floors.
Parapet – Low wall at the edge of a roof or balcony.
Pier – Vertical column strengthening or supporting a wall.
Pointing – Finished mortar joints between bricks.
Purlin – Horizontal roof beam supporting rafters.
Rafter – Sloping timber forming the roof frame.
Reveal – Side face of a window or door opening.
Ridge – Apex or highest point of a roof.
Riser – Vertical part of a stair step.
Rising Damp – Moisture drawn up walls from the ground.
Roof Deck – Base boarding under a flat roof covering.
RSJ – Rolled Steel Joist, a stiff structural beam.
Screed – Smooth top layer over a concrete floor.
Scrim – Mesh tape covering plasterboard joints.
Soakaway – Underground pit letting rainwater soak into the ground.
String – Side of a staircase supporting treads and risers.
Stud Partition – Lightweight internal wall.
Transom – Horizontal divider in a window or above a door.
Tread – Flat step surface on stairs.
Trussed Rafters – Prefabricated triangular roof frames.
Underpinning – Used to strengthen weak foundations
Verge – Edge of a sloped roof over a gable.
Ventilation – Airflow preventing condensation and decay.
Wall Plate – Horizontal timber supporting joists.
Warm Roof – Roof with insulation above the structure.