Gradient/fall on an 'enclosed' patio

Patio flagstones (slabs), concrete flags, stone flags including yorkstone and imported flagstones.
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gazflo
Posts: 1
Joined: Thu May 26, 2022 9:33 pm

Gradient/fall on an 'enclosed' patio

Post: # 119883Post gazflo

Hi all!

Firstly - what a great site! Tons of useful information for an enthusiastic amateur like myself :D

I've read all the info on gradients/falls and think I've got an appropriate solution for my patio project, but I'd appreciate any advice before I start laying.

My patio/path is going to be laid using textured concrete slabs around a sunroom and between the house/garage/sunroom - i.e. bordered on three sides, see sketches:

https://www.gazflo.co.uk/brewcabin/patio001.png
https://www.gazflo.co.uk/brewcabin/patio002.png
https://www.gazflo.co.uk/brewcabin/patio003.png

From the info I've read on the site, an endfall of 1:60 from house to lawn (A to H) would be advisable. I'm also considering a linear drain between patio and lawn (G to H) which would connect to existing SW drain (gutter drain) at point H, so I'd need a crossfall of 1:100.

The easiest way I can see to achieve this is to drop corner H by 90mm and keep points A, B, E, F, G level (150mm below DPC)

This would give the following gradients:
A-H = 90mm/5.5m = 1:61
G-H = 90mm/9.0m = 1:100

Hopefully this approach would minimise the "folding" required around corners C and D (I'll use 450mm slabs to help reduce lipping)

The only downside to this is that there would be a slight slope towards the sunroom F-E and no slope F-G.

I could drop corner G, but I'd have to drop H further to maintain the end and cross falls, and I'm worried that the slope A-H would be too much and cause the patio furniture to be uneven.

Should I drop corners G and H, or is my original plan sufficient?

Thanks in advance!

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