As a building material, stucco is a durable, attractive, and weather-resistant wall covering. It was traditionally used as both an interior and exterior finish applied in one or two thin layers directly over a solid
masonry,
brick, or stone surface. The finish coat usually contained an integral color and was typically textured for appearance. Then with the introduction and development of heavy timber and light wood-framed construction methods, stucco was adapted for this new use by adding a reinforcement lattice, or
lath, attached to and spanning between the structural supports and by increasing the thickness and number of layers of the total system. The lath added support for the wet plaster and tensile strength to the brittle, cured stucco; while the increased thickness and number of layers helped control cracking. The traditional application of stucco and lath occurs in three coats—the scratch coat, the brown coat and the finish coat. The two base coats of plaster are either hand-applied or machine sprayed. The finish coat can be troweled smooth, hand-textured,
floated to a sand finish or sprayed. Originally, the lath material was strips of wood installed horizontally on the wall, with spaces between, that would support the wet plaster until it cured. This
lath and plaster technique became widely used. In exterior wall applications, the lath is installed over a weather-resistant
asphalt-
impregnated felt or
paper sheet that protects the framing from the moisture that can pass through the porous stucco. Following
World War II, the introduction of metal wire
mesh, or netting, replaced the use of wood lath.
Galvanizing the wire made it
corrosion resistant and suitable for exterior wall applications. At the beginning of the 21st century, this "traditional" method of wire mesh lath and three coats of exterior plaster was still widely used. In some parts of the United States with a warmer climate (like
California,
Nevada,
Arizona,
New Mexico and
Florida), stucco is the predominant exterior for both residential and commercial construction. Stucco exterior (with wood frame interior) became a popular alternative in the southwestern United States during the 1970s, as the masonry labor costs for
adobe rose. Stucco relief fragment MET DP123867.jpg|Fragment from a
Roman relief; –161 AD; height: 8¼" (20.9 cm);
Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York City) Afghanistan, Gandhara, Hadda, late Kushan Period - Seated Buddha - 1967.39 - Cleveland Museum of Art.tif|Statue of seated
Buddha; ; overall: 14½" (36.9 cm); from
Hadda (Afghanistan);
Cleveland Museum of Art (Cleveland, Ohio, US) Relief plaque with confronted ibexes, Iran, Sasanian period, 5th or 6th century AD, stucco originally with polychrome painting - Cincinnati Art Museum - DSC03952.JPG|Iranian relief plaque with confronted ibexes; 5th or 6th century AD (the
Sasanian period); stucco originally with polychrome painting;
Cincinnati Art Museum (Cincinnati, US) Wall panel depicting Ix K'an Bolon (Lady Precious Nine), Maya, Pomona, Tabasco state, Late Classic period, c. 790 AD, limestone, stucco, paint - Dallas Museum of Art - DSC04642.jpg|
Maya wall panel depicting Ix K'an Bolon; (Late Classic period); limestone, stucco and paint; from
Pomona (Tabasco), Mexico)
Dallas Museum of Art (Dallas, Texas, US) ==Sculptural and architectural use==