Sacred Places Fall 2013 | Page 21

PROFESSIONAL ALLIANCE SPOTLIGHT LimeWorks.us by Sydney Slotkin Philadelphia is lined with buildings of grand importance and family history, evoking the past for those who walk among them. Keeping these buildings from succumbing to their age is an endless job that requires strategy and skill. Modern fixes can often pose a danger of doing more harm than good to these vintage, increasingly fragile structures. For those serious about responsible preservation, however – restoration that won’t crumble after a few years and require more repairs – there is natural hydraulic lime (NHL). Or rather, there is Andy deGruchy, who founded his company, LimeWorks.us, in 1999 to provide repair services and materials, such as lime mortar, plaster, and whitewash, to restore and preserve the buildings around him. LimeWorks.us and deGruchy’s masonry company, deGruchy Masonry Restoration, are based on one type of limestone that deGruchy swears by: a specific, high-calcium NHL called St. Astier lime, named for the French town from which it is imported. Many restoration projects are attempted with mortars that are too dense and impermeable, and deGruchy spends much of his work undoing the ineffectual restorations that came before him. The St. Astier lime has evenly interspersed reactive silica, so that when water is added and it sets, it doesn’t damage building elements like typical Portland cement might. The difference between deGruchy’s preferred lime and other NHLs is that his is free of clay deposits and other elements that cause the lime to have an unpredictable makeup. LimeWorks.us P.O. Box 151 Milford Square, PA 18935 215.536.6706 www.limeworks.us St. Astier’s purity ensures a uniform appearance with no damage to the structure – a sure thing for deGruchy. LimeWorks.us is located in Milford Square, 30 miles north of Philadelphia. deGruchy is proud to say that LimeWorks.us provided their signature lime for construction of the sea-bearing wall around the Statue of Liberty and that he was entrusted to restore the University of Virginia’s famous rotunda dome. He’s proud of the big names his expertise allows him to cite, but he is proudest of the quality of his restoration work, and caring for structures that need his help. “Being an artisan is probably the one thing that makes me different from other vendors of the materials,” said Andy DeGruchy, founder of LimeWorks, on a job site. His goal isn’t to leave his legacy on old buildings, but to help them maintain theirs. Photo: LimeWorks.us. Sacred Places • Fall 2013 • 20