Patio drainage - Patio drainage
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- Joined: Sat Sep 02, 2006 1:39 pm
- Location: portsmouth
I have just complete laying a kerb stone retaining wall in my garden. this is because i have created 3 different levels of lawn due to the fact that the lawn slope towards the house. i am about to lay my patio but am concerned about drainage. i obviousy can't have the patio drain away from the house as it would just pool against the retaining wall. can anyone help me and advise the best way forward please
cleave
cleave
cleave
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- Location: Hamilton, Scotland
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Agree with the above poster. Slope towards the retaining walll and incorporate drainage.
Don't make the patio slope towards the house. If you are going to go to all the effort of installing a new patio do it right. If/when you come to sell, you don't want a surveyor highlighting that the patio's drainage is a (potential) problem. You will do all that work and the buyer may say the garden needs to be redone completely 'cos of this and they may try and get the price down. Youu don't know what the market will be like when you come to sell.
It is only a bit more work and you will curse yourself if you choose the easy option and it comes back to haunt you later.
Don't make the patio slope towards the house. If you are going to go to all the effort of installing a new patio do it right. If/when you come to sell, you don't want a surveyor highlighting that the patio's drainage is a (potential) problem. You will do all that work and the buyer may say the garden needs to be redone completely 'cos of this and they may try and get the price down. Youu don't know what the market will be like when you come to sell.
It is only a bit more work and you will curse yourself if you choose the easy option and it comes back to haunt you later.
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- Location: portsmouth
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it is possible to have it along the house wall see:
http://www.pavingexpert.com/drain06.htm
shows some detail into laying and with them being against the wall.
http://www.pavingexpert.com/drain06.htm
shows some detail into laying and with them being against the wall.
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- Joined: Mon Sep 11, 2006 2:54 pm
- Location: London
Hi. I've got a similar problem to the original poster, but unfortunately it's inherited.
We've got a house where the patio has been laid right up to the house. It's at the same level as the damp course (might even be above it slightly) and there is only about 5mm gap between the top of the patio and the vent bricks. The house is about 3.5m wide and there is a rain water drain at one end that provides the patio drainage. The patio has a slight fall towards the house.
(There's a picture here: http://www.redclock.net/tmp/DSC00040.JPG )
The question is, what can I do about this? Do I go to the trouble and cost of channelling or do I just cut the patio back from the house and and fill it with pea gravel? If the gravel, should I put some sort of drainage pipe underneath it?
We've got a house where the patio has been laid right up to the house. It's at the same level as the damp course (might even be above it slightly) and there is only about 5mm gap between the top of the patio and the vent bricks. The house is about 3.5m wide and there is a rain water drain at one end that provides the patio drainage. The patio has a slight fall towards the house.
(There's a picture here: http://www.redclock.net/tmp/DSC00040.JPG )
The question is, what can I do about this? Do I go to the trouble and cost of channelling or do I just cut the patio back from the house and and fill it with pea gravel? If the gravel, should I put some sort of drainage pipe underneath it?
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your slabs look to me to be 1 course beneath dpc,airbricks are noramlly on the course immediately beneath dpc,on older houses somethimes there is 2 dpcs,1 beneath the joists and 1 at finished floor level.
have you actually got water ingression??
150mm is optimun but if it aint broke dont fix it
cheers tony
have you actually got water ingression??
150mm is optimun but if it aint broke dont fix it
cheers tony
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- Joined: Mon Sep 11, 2006 2:54 pm
- Location: London
Cheers Tony.
There are some damp marks on the wall on the other side of that airbrick, and some efflorescence coming through on a wall in the kitchen. (These rooms are next to each other, so it's the same external wall.)
The house dates from the 30's. There's no obvious difference in any of the bricks so the dpc isn't immediately obvious.
There are some damp marks on the wall on the other side of that airbrick, and some efflorescence coming through on a wall in the kitchen. (These rooms are next to each other, so it's the same external wall.)
The house dates from the 30's. There's no obvious difference in any of the bricks so the dpc isn't immediately obvious.
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