Posted: Tue Jan 22, 2019 1:07 pm
Hi,
I had a porcelain patio laid in the high heat of the summer 2018. I live on new build estate which still has houses being developed. After a week of the patio being laid I noticed about 6 slabs were rocking and contacted my fitter. He repaired repaired those slabs by digging them up, removing the cement and then laid them again. Over the following months I noticed more slabs (about 15 different slabs from before) were rocking or created a hollow sound when tapped. So I contacted our fitter again and he sent one of his fitters round and he mentioned it was most probably clay heave. So I said that it would be best to wait another couple of months to get them back to make sure no more slabs became loose. Over those months another 10 slabs were affected.
I contacted the fitter in December to ask if he could repair the slabs but he is denying that it is his problem but he would come and have a look in the new year. Before I get our fitter back I would like to know whether it is his responsibility to correct the issue.
As I mentioned the patio was installed during the high temperatures in July 2018. Up to 150 mm of soil was removed to expose a clay surface. During the 2 week build the clay became rock hard. The fitter had tracked the ground with the mini digger, wacker plated the type 1 in two 50mm layers, laid the paving on a wet full mortar bed with a SBR slurry bond. He tells me I should be able to drive a car on it and it not move, but it has by only walking on it.
If this is clay heave would the fitter be responsible for correcting the loose and rocking slabs?
I spoke to another patio fitting firm that was fitting one of my connecting neighbours patio and they used a steel reinforced concrete base because of it being a new build estate and would be susceptible to movement. This neighbour had a stone resin patio fitted so I am not sure I can compare the sturdiness against mine.
I had a porcelain patio laid in the high heat of the summer 2018. I live on new build estate which still has houses being developed. After a week of the patio being laid I noticed about 6 slabs were rocking and contacted my fitter. He repaired repaired those slabs by digging them up, removing the cement and then laid them again. Over the following months I noticed more slabs (about 15 different slabs from before) were rocking or created a hollow sound when tapped. So I contacted our fitter again and he sent one of his fitters round and he mentioned it was most probably clay heave. So I said that it would be best to wait another couple of months to get them back to make sure no more slabs became loose. Over those months another 10 slabs were affected.
I contacted the fitter in December to ask if he could repair the slabs but he is denying that it is his problem but he would come and have a look in the new year. Before I get our fitter back I would like to know whether it is his responsibility to correct the issue.
As I mentioned the patio was installed during the high temperatures in July 2018. Up to 150 mm of soil was removed to expose a clay surface. During the 2 week build the clay became rock hard. The fitter had tracked the ground with the mini digger, wacker plated the type 1 in two 50mm layers, laid the paving on a wet full mortar bed with a SBR slurry bond. He tells me I should be able to drive a car on it and it not move, but it has by only walking on it.
If this is clay heave would the fitter be responsible for correcting the loose and rocking slabs?
I spoke to another patio fitting firm that was fitting one of my connecting neighbours patio and they used a steel reinforced concrete base because of it being a new build estate and would be susceptible to movement. This neighbour had a stone resin patio fitted so I am not sure I can compare the sturdiness against mine.