How to work out a patio area
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- Posts: 2
- Joined: Wed May 14, 2008 11:46 pm
- Location: birmingham
i am about to lay a patio using 3 different sized flagstones.i have laid slabs before but i have never had to work out the area (m2).i have broke down the measurements like so,the one area is 7 metres long by 4 metres wide,the second area is 4.5 long by 2.5 wide and the final area is 4.5 metres long by 1.8 metres wide.what i need to know is how many square metres of slabs in total i will need to order.I hope i have made sense,i would really appreciate someones help with this,cheers
sfulla31
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I wrote/created a short exercise for the training group about calculating areas, but it never got used other than the one session I ran (and it probably never will be used again, given the parlous state of training at the moment). It was/is a Powerpoint thingy, and would need a bit more work to make it web-friendly, but I'm quite proud of it. For copyright reasons, I can't use the actual Powerpoint thingy that's already finished; I'd have to start again and do summat new, but it might be a nice project for the summer evenings.
Site Agent - Pavingexpert
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sfulla, if you want to do this yourself, rather than use Tony's service (which will solve it very quickly and inexpensively), here's what you do:
First, determine the common demoninator in your slab sizes. Usually, it's 300mm, as you'll know if you laid before. A three size design would normally have 300x300mm, 300x600mm and 600x600mm (it was better when they were 1x1, 2x1 and 2x2 but hey ho).
If you can, adjust the paving size to the common demoninator, this will remove the need for cuts and give the paving a more consistent look, e.g., have 7.2m or 6.9m rather than 7m.
Re-do your total area calculation with the adjustments taken into consideration, add 5% (if from BM stock) or 10% (if special order) for breakages/spares/dodgy slabs. Robert is your father's brother.
First, determine the common demoninator in your slab sizes. Usually, it's 300mm, as you'll know if you laid before. A three size design would normally have 300x300mm, 300x600mm and 600x600mm (it was better when they were 1x1, 2x1 and 2x2 but hey ho).
If you can, adjust the paving size to the common demoninator, this will remove the need for cuts and give the paving a more consistent look, e.g., have 7.2m or 6.9m rather than 7m.
Re-do your total area calculation with the adjustments taken into consideration, add 5% (if from BM stock) or 10% (if special order) for breakages/spares/dodgy slabs. Robert is your father's brother.