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CMU (concrete masonry unit)

CMU is a concrete masonry unit. Hollow cores can be filled with concrete and steel for structural capacity. Standard 200/300/400 series. Distinct from clay brick.

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A CMU (concrete masonry unit) is a concrete-cast block, typically rectangular with hollow cores, used as a structural or non-structural masonry unit in residential and small-commercial construction. The hollow cores can be left empty, filled with insulation, or filled with concrete and steel reinforcement to provide significant structural capacity. CMUs are made and supplied to AS/NZS 4455.1:2008 (masonry units) and designed under AS 3700:2018 (masonry structures). Locally “besser block” is a colloquial term derived from the historical CSR Besser machine that pressed them.

Standard CMU sizes in Australian residential:

DesignationNominal dimensions (length x height x width, mm)Notes
200 series (20.01, 20.02)390 x 190 x 90 mm”Half block”, non-structural infill, fences
200 series (20.31, 20.32)390 x 190 x 190 mmStandard structural block, retaining walls, party walls
300 series390 x 190 x 290 mmHeavy structural, basement retaining
400 series390 x 190 x 390 mmMass retaining walls, civil applications

Where CMU appears in residential:

  • Retaining walls (most common residential use), often steel-reinforced and core-filled.
  • Basement walls and below-ground walls.
  • Party walls between attached dwellings (fire-rated, often reinforced or core-filled).
  • Fence walls (lower-strength, often non-structural).
  • Garage and shed walls as cheap alternative to clay brick.
  • Pier columns in pier-and-beam systems where solid concrete pier is uneconomic.

CMU vs clay brick:

PropertyCMUClay brick
MaterialCast concrete (cement + aggregate + sand)Fired clay
DensityHigher (concrete = ~1,800-2,200 kg/m³)Lower (clay = ~1,800 kg/m³ but smaller unit)
Compressive strengthHigher (12 to 25+ MPa)Moderate (15 to 30 MPa)
Hollow / solidHollow with coresSolid (typically) or perforated
Mortar joint10 mm typical10 mm typical
Reinforcement optionsCores accept rebar + grout fillGenerally needs cavity construction for reinforcement
CostLower per m²Higher per m²
AestheticIndustrial / utilitarian (unless painted/rendered)Architectural / domestic

Reinforcement and core-fill:

For a structural CMU wall (retaining, basement, party), the design typically requires:

  • Vertical reinforcement in the cores at specified centres (commonly N12 bar at 800 mm centres for low retaining, denser for taller).
  • Horizontal reinforcement in bed-joint reinforcement or in horizontal bond beams cast in special “knock-out” blocks.
  • Cores grouted with concrete (commonly N20 grout, smaller aggregate than slab concrete) once reinforcement is placed.
  • Engineered design under AS 3700 by a structural engineer.

Common defects:

  • Cores not filled where the design called for them (a “hollow” wall meant to be reinforced).
  • Vertical reo missed at every other core, instead of every core as designed.
  • Bond-beam knock-out blocks substituted with standard blocks, omitting the horizontal tie.
  • DPC missed at the base course (a CMU wall on damp ground without DPC wicks moisture continuously upward).

Also known as: concrete block; besser block; concrete masonry; hollow block; CMU block.

Category: Materials.

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-16. Verified: 2026-05-16. Quarterly review for currency.