

Who they are and what they sell
Brampton Brick is a North American manufacturer of architectural clay brick, manufactured stone, concrete block and sills, paired with Oaks Landscape Products for pavers, slabs, steps, walls and copings. Their site positions the combined portfolio as one integrated source for building exteriors and site hardscapes, with region‑specific availability and design tools.
Product families and rough scale
Expect five core families on the masonry side, plus six on the landscape side. The range covers face brick and thin brick, CMU and architectural block, cast stone and sills, then pavers, slabs, steps and curbs, retaining and garden walls, copings and accessory sands. The company promotes “over 1,000 options,” which reasonably translates to hundreds of distinct SKUs across colors, sizes and finishes (Brampton Brick, 2025).
Sustainability posture at a glance
Brampton Brick outlines four sustainability principles and highlights recycled content in concrete mixes, local sourcing, durability, and permeable pavers under Oaks as stormwater best practice. Their sustainability page is a helpful primer, especially for design teams assembling documentation stacks (Brampton Brick Sustainability, 2025).
EPD coverage snapshot
We could not locate any current product‑specific EPDs for Brampton Brick or Oaks in public operator registries at the time of writing. An earlier clay brick EPD existed, yet it appears to have expired. That leaves a strong catalog with thin disclosure in the places specifiers now search first.
Why this matters for specs in 2025
Projects pursuing LEED v5 emphasize both disclosure and embodied‑carbon performance for materials. Product‑specific, third‑party verified EPDs remain the cleanest way to avoid conservative assumptions that can push a product out of contention, especially when teams are racing to finish materials credits on time (USGBC, 2025).
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Where competitors show up with EPDs
In hardscapes, several direct alternatives publish portfolio EPDs that cover pavers, slabs and walls. Unilock lists EPDs for drycast, wetcast and hermetic product groups on its commercial resources hub (Unilock EPDs, 2025). Permacon and Techo‑Bloc also surface EPDs for selected lines in recent years. In CMU, an industry‑average EPD is available in the U.S., verified by ASTM, which many submittal packages now reference for baselining (CMHA, 2024).
A likely gap with commercial impact
Take a flagship clay brick series used on schools or mixed‑use shells. Without a product‑specific EPD, design teams often substitute a close match from a brand that has one, since it reduces documentation friction and avoids a penalty in the spreadsheet tally. The same story repeats for high‑volume Oaks pavers on plaza and streetscape work, where competitors’ umbrella EPDs can cover a wide set of shapes and finishes, making procurement smoother.
Competitive set you will frequently face
- Clay brick and architectural masonry: Glen‑Gery, General Shale, Acme Brick, Belden Brick, Triangle Brick, Arriscraft and Shouldice.
- Landscape pavers and walls in the Great Lakes and Northeast: Unilock, Permacon, Techo‑Bloc, Oldcastle APG’s Belgard network.
These are the names that regularly appear on shortlists for education, municipal, healthcare and corporate campuses.
Fastest path to close the EPD gap
Start where volume and bid frequency intersect. Prioritize a product‑specific EPD for one clay brick series and a consolidated EPD for Oaks drycast pavers and segmental walls. A strong LCA partner will map the common PCRs competitors use, pick the operator that fits your markets, and build a data plan that minimizes plant disruption. Treat data collection like a short, focused sprint, not a marathon. It is the difference between weeks and many months.
For CMU and hardscape products, using the current concrete masonry and segmental paving PCRs keeps alignment with what reviewers expect. For LEED v5 buyers, that alignment reduces review cycles and helps teams hit materials targets without value‑engineering your SKU off the submittal.
What good looks like in practice
Publish a product‑specific Type III EPD for a top brick series, plus a portfolio EPD that covers the majority of Oaks pavers and walls by mass of sales. Add a short, public‑facing sustainability page update that links directly to downloadable PDFs, so estimators and specifiers can self‑serve. Then plan a second wave that extends coverage to stone veneers and architectural block. This phased approach is pragmatic, fast, and it compounds across bid seasons. Its also the easiest way to defend share when owners tighten embodied‑carbon guardrails.
Final take
Brampton Brick has the breadth and the brand presence. Getting back to current, product‑specific EPDs across a few hero SKUs will remove avoidable hurdles at submittal, make life simpler for design teams, and keep their products in the mix when LEED v5 expectations steer choices toward documented options.


