Why waterproofing matters
Almost every brownstone, brick, and stucco facade failure we repair starts the same way: water gets in, and water doesn't get out fast enough. The freeze-thaw cycle does the rest. Multiply that by NYC's 25–35 freeze-thaw events per year and the math becomes obvious.
A properly waterproofed facade resists water entry at the surface while still allowing the wall to release moisture from inside. A poorly waterproofed facade traps moisture, accelerates damage, and looks fine for two years before catastrophically peeling, blistering, or spalling.
This is the single highest-leverage investment in masonry maintenance. A $15,000 waterproofing job on a healthy brownstone often prevents $80,000+ of restoration over the next 20 years.
Breathable vs. sealing — and why this is critical
This is where most homeowners get burned. There are two completely different categories of "waterproofing" products on the market, and they do opposite things.
Vapor-permeable (breathable) coatings — sometimes called "breathable" or "permeable" — repel liquid water while allowing water vapor (humidity) to pass through. The wall stays dry from rain, but moisture from inside the building or absorbed from below can still escape. This is what historic masonry needs.
Vapor-barrier sealers — silicone-based "miracle" products, oil-based stains, or some elastomeric paints — block water in both directions. Liquid water cannot enter, but moisture cannot escape either. On historic brick or brownstone, this is catastrophic. Trapped moisture freezes inside the wall and blows the surface off from the inside.
We use only vapor-permeable systems on historic masonry. There are products on the shelf at the supply house we will not use under any circumstances. Knowing the difference is the entire job.
The single most expensive mistake in NYC masonry
A homeowner pays a contractor $4,000 to "seal" their brownstone with a silicone-based "lifetime" sealer. It looks great for a year. By year three the brownstone face is blowing off in dinner-plate-sized pieces because moisture cannot escape. The repair now costs $80,000. We see this almost every month.
What Thorocoat is
Thorocoat (and similar vapor-permeable acrylic coating systems) is the workhorse waterproofing product for NYC stucco, brick, and brownstone facades. It is a thick, paint-like coating that:
- Repels liquid water (driving rain) at the surface
- Allows water vapor to pass through (the wall can breathe)
- Bridges hairline cracks, sealing typical facade movement
- Comes in custom-mixed colors that match historic brownstone, limestone, or any modern color
- Lasts 12–20+ years with minimal maintenance
Thorocoat is most commonly applied to stucco facades, painted brick, brownstone facades after restoration patching, and any surface where a unified, color-matched, weather-tight finish is the goal.
Our application process
1. Surface preparation
The surface is cleaned, loose material removed, cracks pre-treated, repairs made. Thorocoat is only as good as the surface beneath it. This step is typically half the project effort.
2. Power wash (when appropriate)
For stucco and durable substrates, we power-wash. For soft historic stone, we use gentler cleaning methods to avoid damaging the substrate.
3. Crack treatment and patching
Cracks larger than hairline are pre-filled with appropriate patching compound. We do not coat over open cracks — they will telegraph through.
4. Primer (where needed)
Most surfaces benefit from a compatible primer that bonds the coating to the substrate.
5. Two-coat application
Thorocoat is applied in two full coats, typically with a heavy nap roller and brush touch-up at edges. Color is custom-mixed to the homeowner's spec.
6. Cure and inspection
Final coat cures over 24–72 hours depending on weather. We walk the building with you to confirm the finish.
What waterproofing costs
Pricing is driven by surface area, prep requirements, and access (height, scaffolding).
Small facade / one side
$5K – $12K
Two-story or partial application. Prep + Thorocoat.
Standard brownstone
$10K – $25K
Full front facade, four-story brownstone. Most common project.
Full building (multi-side)
$25K – $60K
All exposed sides, prep, scaffolding included.
Stucco system + waterproofing
$15K – $50K
Existing stucco wall — power wash, repairs, two-coat Thorocoat.
Frequently asked questions
How long does waterproofing last?
Quality vapor-permeable coatings last 12–20+ years before any meaningful refresh is needed. Some buildings get one application and then only need occasional spot touch-up for the next 25 years. The key variables are the quality of the coating, the quality of the prep, and exposure (south-facing walls weather faster than north-facing).
Can I just have it pressure-washed and called done?
For some modern buildings, yes — pressure washing alone is the right scope. For historic masonry it is rarely enough. Pressure washing exposes existing cracks and surface damage; without recoating, you have basically just made the existing problems more visible to weather.
What's the difference between Thorocoat and regular paint?
Regular exterior paint is designed for wood and modern siding. It is not formulated to bridge cracks, repel water aggressively, or remain vapor-permeable on masonry. Thorocoat (and similar systems) are specifically engineered for stucco, brick, and stone. They are also 3–5x thicker per coat. Putting house paint on a brownstone is a bad idea.
Does Thorocoat come in real "brownstone" colors?
Yes — and this is one of the under-appreciated benefits. Thorocoat can be color-matched to any real brownstone color, far better than off-the-shelf "stone" tans. We tint on-site to match the existing facade, the building next door, or whatever the client prefers.