subbase for garden paths
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- Posts: 2
- Joined: Mon Feb 23, 2004 8:09 am
- Location: surrey
50mm is at the lower end of what I'd use, even for a garden path. If you've got a decent sub-grade, then you can get away with 50mm, but I usually suggest 75mm as a minimum for garden paths, or other areas that aren't trafficked by vehicles.
I use this figure because 75mm was the minimum depth of sub-base that was permitted under the old 'Spec for Highway Works' for use beneath public footpaths that were to be flagged, although I know from experience that, on some sites, 50mm would be ample As long as there is sufficient depth to foem a coherent sub-base and to enable regulating and decent compaction, it will be ok.
I use this figure because 75mm was the minimum depth of sub-base that was permitted under the old 'Spec for Highway Works' for use beneath public footpaths that were to be flagged, although I know from experience that, on some sites, 50mm would be ample As long as there is sufficient depth to foem a coherent sub-base and to enable regulating and decent compaction, it will be ok.
We're particularly blessed/cursed in Culcheth, as we sit on a huge dollop of Boulder Clay surrounded by what in Lancashire is known as 'Moss', ie, a swampy, peaty bog-land, that isolates us from Manchester, Warrington and Leigh. It's a great sub-grade for constructing driveways, or for building houses, but it's a bugger if you like your gardening!