First crack at laying paving.

Patio flagstones (slabs), concrete flags, stone flags including yorkstone and imported flagstones.
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Lukey
Posts: 4
Joined: Thu Jun 03, 2004 9:11 am

Post: # 4181Post Lukey

I am about to have a go at laying an area of paving in my back garden which will be used for barbies e.t.c but I've never tried my hand at paving before and would appreciated some advice.

I have laid a brick border to prevent leeching/bleeding but i'm not sure what depth of soil to excavate and what type of bedding I should use. I've read various books but they all suggest different methods - the simplest of which seems to be to excavate down three inches and then just bed the slabs on sharp sand. However, I watched a gardening program last week in which the landscaper bedded slabs on what he referred to as 'dry mix' - which I'm assuming is some kind of sand and cement mix - but he didn't mention what ratio of sand to cement was used.

Need less to say, I'm a bit confused and would be grateful if anyone could point me in the right direction.

Would also like to congratulate Tony on a well run and informative site.

84-1093879891

Post: # 4184Post 84-1093879891

All the info you need is on the main website. Start on the Laying Flags page and then work your way through the subsequent pages.

Lukey
Posts: 4
Joined: Thu Jun 03, 2004 9:11 am

Post: # 4189Post Lukey

Thanks Tony. Looks like I'll be using a 10:1 mix and laying them individually. Seems straight forward enough :)

tonyr
Posts: 2
Joined: Fri Jun 04, 2004 10:36 am

Post: # 4198Post tonyr

I'm a bit confused myself.

If I use a 10:1 mix as a bedding layer for a light use patio, do I still have to compact it with a wacker plate?

Many thanks

Tony

73-1093879373

Post: # 4200Post 73-1093879373

From what I've learnt from Tony and his website, you don't need a wacker plate for a light use patio - simply trodding down the bedding material with your feet is good enough. Then loosen the top 15-25mm to allow the flag to be bedded down.

For heavy use or vehicular access, a well laid subbase and firm compaction method is needed.

I'm currently doing a light use patio but because of a soft subbase, I'm putting in the effort to lay a good granular sub base, including using a whacker to compress it. Maybe a bit over the top, but I'm planning on living in the house for a long long time, so I'd rather get the foundations right.

As I said above though, for the bedding layer I'll be using the good old trample with my boots method.

(Edited by InfAddict at 11:43 am on June 4, 2004)

84-1093879891

Post: # 4202Post 84-1093879891

Yep - Inf is right. You don't need to use a plate compactor for a patio - boot trampling is fine for this type of project.

tonyr
Posts: 2
Joined: Fri Jun 04, 2004 10:36 am

Post: # 4207Post tonyr

Many thanks!

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