brick and gravel on a concrete base

Patio flagstones (slabs), concrete flags, stone flags including yorkstone and imported flagstones.
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michelle anderson
Posts: 16
Joined: Tue May 28, 2002 8:22 pm

Post: # 3005Post michelle anderson

Hi, I have a concreted patio with a small drainage channel cut into it and want to make it look more interesting.
Can I lay brick directly on it ( subject to dpc level ) and infil between the brick with gravel?

84-1093879891

Post: # 3006Post 84-1093879891

The short answer is "Yes, but.... "

How are you going to bed the bricks on top of the concrete?

How are you going to 'infill with gravel'? This would require large gaps between the bricks - what's going to hold the bricks in place?

PS - are you the lady I met at External Works earlier this year? The name seems familiar.


bobinalongnicly
Posts: 18
Joined: Sun Nov 30, 2003 9:39 pm

Post: # 3008Post bobinalongnicly

Good looking fit and hardworking guy, loves building bricks on concrete floors. available at good rates. :)

michelle anderson
Posts: 16
Joined: Tue May 28, 2002 8:22 pm

Post: # 3014Post michelle anderson

Maybe I didnt explain myself properly- Id like to bed in areas of decorative paving on top of the concrete and then fill in the areas not paved with decorative gravel- Is this any clearer?
And no, Tony, I havent had the pleasure of meeting you !
Billybob thingymajig, Ill keep you in mind for my big concrete jobs.

danensis
Posts: 335
Joined: Mon Aug 11, 2003 4:24 pm
Location: Derbyshire
Contact:

Post: # 3015Post danensis

What, like foundations for motorway bridges?

84-1093879891

Post: # 3016Post 84-1093879891

So - the areas of hard paving (the bricks) and the loose surface dressing (the gravel) are separate. That sounds fine.

I'm still not sure how you're going to bed the bricks over the concrete. If it's a smallish area, then maybe rigid bedding is a better option, but for larger areas, you'll need mortar-edge restraint courses and then you can lay on sand for the body of the paving, assuming you've made allowances for draining the bedding.

If you do go for mortar bedding, then it may be worth looking at some of the thinset bedding products that are on the market. These allow you to bed the bricks on beds as thin as 3-6mm, which can help enormously if you're having to deal with a DPC.

The gravel should be dead straighforward. You'll need some form of retaining edge to stop it spreading everywhere, and the obvious thing to use is the brick to match the rest of the project. Don't put too much down, though - remmber that any more than 30-40mm or gravel becomes impossible to walk across, so, if you've 60mm or so to make-up to tally with the brick paving, I'd lay a bed of very weak grit sand and cement (say 20:1) to about 30mm thickness over the concrete and then top dress that with 25-30mm of the gravel.

How's that?

michelle anderson
Posts: 16
Joined: Tue May 28, 2002 8:22 pm

Post: # 3017Post michelle anderson

Thanks for that, its answered my question most adequately.
The guy wanting work on motorways- Im starting a big job on the M6 shortly- Ill be in touch.

84-1093879891

Post: # 3019Post 84-1093879891

Is it you doing the re-surfacing work between Warrington and Wiggin? Oooh! You will be popular!! ;)

bobinalongnicly
Posts: 18
Joined: Sun Nov 30, 2003 9:39 pm

Post: # 3021Post bobinalongnicly

michelle, i to like to bed in areas of decorative paving.More so in summertime. :) cheesy i know

68-1093879161

Post: # 3022Post 68-1093879161

I'll get me coat..

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