Paving on a wood deck base - Paving on a wood deck base
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Hi, has anyone added stone paving onto an elevated wood deck base substructure. I am currently considering a 1m high elevated deck for the side of the house due to the land being low at the side. 12m long & 2.8m wide. Wood deck is considered slippy. I would prefer stone surface but I have the 1m height issue. I would be concerned about slight movement of the deck with a rigid stone surface? I have looked for steel DIY substructure at low price DIY but cannot find?
Mr C Lion
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Theres the bradstone patio deck, but I don't think that will stretch to 1m up.
Have you thought about some decking boards with the added grip strips in them?
In my opinion putting any form of stone on top of a decked surface would be a bad idea, not because of movement but because of weight.
Have you thought about some decking boards with the added grip strips in them?
In my opinion putting any form of stone on top of a decked surface would be a bad idea, not because of movement but because of weight.
Ouzel Landscapes - Garden Design and Landscape construction.
Serving; Milton Keynes, Bedford, Buckingham
and the surrounding areas.
01908 465792
07800 888120
www.ouzel-landscapes.co.uk
Serving; Milton Keynes, Bedford, Buckingham
and the surrounding areas.
01908 465792
07800 888120
www.ouzel-landscapes.co.uk
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Stone on top opf wood? Never! Guaranteed to fail.
I like Kieran's idea of using the Bradstone PatioDeck idea because their steel sub-frame carries the paving, so any expansion/contraction of the wooden decking (and there's bound to be some - it's always either to hot or too wet or both!) could be accommodated via a slip plane between the steel and the timber, rather than letting it generate a crack between timber and stone.
I like Kieran's idea of using the Bradstone PatioDeck idea because their steel sub-frame carries the paving, so any expansion/contraction of the wooden decking (and there's bound to be some - it's always either to hot or too wet or both!) could be accommodated via a slip plane between the steel and the timber, rather than letting it generate a crack between timber and stone.
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