Balcony blues

Patio flagstones (slabs), concrete flags, stone flags including yorkstone and imported flagstones.
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jonnyboyentire
Posts: 320
Joined: Tue May 27, 2008 7:09 pm
Location: uk

Post: # 53482Post jonnyboyentire

Hi all

2nd time typing this :( lost in a crash grrrr. Never mind lol.

Quoting to re-flag/tile two balconies, very very good customer, house 3 years old. Approx 150mm step up to cill height inside house.

Current surface is a loose-laid, 600sq x 20mm concrete pebble-tile bonded to 120mm of polystyrene :-

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Subsurface appears to be a sound strong thin screed over leadwork. Surface of both around 11m2.

Obvious concerns are weight and waterproof integrity. Ideally due to step up inside it would be prefereable to have the new surface as close to cill height as possible outside, not a deal breaker though. Rainwater currently eventually makes its way under the existing surface, around the various debris/leaves/weeds etc to drainage arrangements in place. Current tile things rock, move, uneven, squelch (remember the polystyrene) and stink. Still soaking today, no rain for five days here.

Rear is over a ground floor room (ie it forms part of the roof). Falls away from house to two corner lead-gullied hoppers (top and bottom right hand side in this pic:-

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Front a lot more jury-rigged :(. Situated over open front door/porch area. Falls back towards house ??? where under the tile thingys in each corner are 2" leaded holes (hence we think the balconies may be all lead - shhhh don't tell the travellers...) which seem to go through the balcony down into ground-floor downpipes :-

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In addition to this shambles there are two downpipes shedding the entire front elevation roof's stormwater underneath the tiles, out of a normal spout, adjacent to (but not into) the said drainage holes.

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I have a real problem in how to resolve these jobs - customer is spot-on so I wouldn't dream of declining the work. We have mulled it over for a few days and are struggling. Building a step on the balconies would look pants. The rear one is easiest as we could flag/tile straight on top of the sub-base with a thin wet screed, falling towards the gullies but that doesnt solve the step-up-and-down problem. Building up the height worries me greatly in terms of weight/rigidity. The front is far worse of course - step-up-and-down, falls back towards the house, downpipes shedding boatloads of water onto the new surface.


Anyone got any suggestions for this one? I really could do with a hand..........pretty please!!


Thanks in advance :D
full bed only - spot and dabs are the scourge!!

Pablo
Posts: 1990
Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 10:49 pm
Location: N/Ireland

Post: # 53483Post Pablo

You could use the dry laid roof terrace systems where by the flag sits on a plastic pedestal/ chair. Water passes freely through and away to the drains. You can get the plastic pedestals in varying heights and some are individually adjustable but the flags need to be 60mm+ specials. If it's tiles I'm seeing my Brother in law in the morning (he's own's a few tile shops having been a tiler for years) and I'll show him this. Tiling at floor level and installing new doors would be a pricey solution.
Can't see it from my house

jonnyboyentire
Posts: 320
Joined: Tue May 27, 2008 7:09 pm
Location: uk

Post: # 53484Post jonnyboyentire

Thanks Pablo, that would be great. We're open to suggestions - the client loves the 300 - odd metres of black lime flags we've laid downstairs, might be a bit heavy though :( lol
full bed only - spot and dabs are the scourge!!

lutonlagerlout
Site Admin
Posts: 15184
Joined: Fri Aug 04, 2006 12:20 am
Location: bedfordshire

Post: # 53490Post lutonlagerlout

we just did one exactly like that johnny
we used promenade tiles
one example
we had to get the roof refelted nice and flat then the tiles are laid on some expanding adhesive,making sure that there is a 5mm gap left
from sub strata to top of tiles is about 20mm
the water than finds its way through the un grouted joints to the drain off
LLL
"what,you want paying today??"

YOUR TEXT GOES HERE

Richard williams
Posts: 3
Joined: Thu Jul 08, 2010 11:07 am
Location: United Kingdom

Post: # 53505Post Richard williams

Hi Johnny

Have a look at the patio overlay system on the R2 Paving Solutions web site, might be the answer

www.r2pavingsolutions.co.uk

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