Best substance to widen existing drive. Shingle / slabs?

Best substance to widen existing drive. Shingle / slabs?

Author
Discussion

jon-

Original Poster:

16,511 posts

217 months

Sunday 19th October 2014
quotequote all
Now I've my stump out, I can go ahead with the original plan and turn this section of flower bed into driveway:



The medium term plan is to redo the entire front drive / garden area, but for now I'd like to use this newly reclaimed bit of land to make parking easier over the winter.

Original plan was to dig out some topsoil (once I've found somewhere to dispose of it), crush it down somehow, a layer of subbase then just roughly lay some slabs down. Cheap, easy and semi neat if they match the concrete.

Now I'm thinking shingle might be a better idea, as that's what's the other side of the concrete, plus ground movement wouldn't matter so much with the weight of the car on shingle compared to paving slabs? Same plan as above, just with some sort of sheet layer too.

Any other thoughts?

Edited by jon- on Sunday 19th October 20:31

jon-

Original Poster:

16,511 posts

217 months

Monday 20th October 2014
quotequote all
Chrisgr31 said:
My drive is one ot those that consist of 2 concrete strips. I have now widened it to take the caravan and both cars side by side. Due to budgetary constraints and like you the thought I would do something else long term I dug it out to a depth of around 10 inches, then placed membrane on it and then infilled with roadstone, whacked it down and topped with fine layer of granite chippings using the 20mm stones.

Theory being that in future I can rake out the the top surface and lay block paving instead and not have to redo the base.
Thanks guys, this sounds like the best plan.

Out of interest, what did you do with the topsoil, and did you hire a whacker or do it an old fashioned way?

My local tip will take a large bag of soil a month...

jon-

Original Poster:

16,511 posts

217 months

Wednesday 22nd October 2014
quotequote all
I've finally measured up! The area I need to dig out is:

700cm long
140cm at its widest, 100cm at its narrowest.

I reckon that gives me ~8.4 square metres or 90 sq foot.

If I need to dig to 20cm, that gives me a volume of soil of about 1.68m3

That's about 2 tonnes.

fk. I'm not hiding that in a KA over a few tip runs.

Lets cost this.

I figure it'll be £200 to hire a small skip.

I'll need approx 3 tonnes of base / gravel. At about £100/850kg bag. So that's another £350 in materials.

So £550 with a bucketload of manual labor (which I enjoy, however it does take time).

Not too bad.

Edited by jon- on Wednesday 22 October 14:57

jon-

Original Poster:

16,511 posts

217 months

Wednesday 22nd October 2014
quotequote all
markbigears said:
£100 for 850kg? Christ on a bike .... i pay £40 a ton for gravel and type one and i'm down'sarf
I was trying to (over) average out between the base layer, which will be cheaper, and the top layer, which I'll probably want gray slate or something similar. Plus, I'll need it delivered.

jon-

Original Poster:

16,511 posts

217 months

Wednesday 22nd October 2014
quotequote all
I can see this turning into regravelling the whole front of house now, so it all matches (probably about the same amount of space again, I might as well do it all at once...)

I wonder if I've enough time before it gets too wet to be fun.