I am intending to construct an external terrace & swimming pool surround using frost proof anti slip ceramic tiles. The site (150m/2) is in the Southern Brittany coast with little or no history of prolonged frost winter conditions.
My proposal for base construction is as follows:
1) Soakaways are already installed
2) Stabilise existing surface (12 -15mm aggregate) with mechnical whacker
3) Treat surface with weedkiller
4) Establish borders (concrete haunches & edgings)
5) Establish levels & falls
6) Introduce & whack 70mm "mixte compound" (this is a coarse sand & small aggregate mix)
7) Install 6mm thk C/W standoff steel reinforcing mesh throughout install a dry screed to provide 40mm cover over the reinforcing steel
9) stabilise & compund the dry screed, wait until firm
10) lay ceramic tiles directly to the hardened screed surface & grout.
Note:
I have not allowed for a membrane in the design, could anyone comment on this?
Does this design seem sound or is there an easier way?
Hear all see all say nowt! Eat all sup all pay nowt! & if ever tha does for nowt, make sure tha does it for thee sen!
I'd have thought that a 100mm concrete slab with poly-fibres rather than mesh steel would be a better substrate for tiling. That would just involve ...
<ul>
<li> level existing surface
<li> blind with sand/pea gravel
<li> erect formwork
<li> damp proof membrane
<li> 100mm 20-30 Newton concrete with 12mm poly-fibres
<li>waterproof ceramic tile adhesive
<li> tiles
</ul>