Artificial lawn
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Discussion

lewis s

Original Poster:

5,937 posts

215 months

Sunday 16th October 2011
quotequote all
I have an area in the back garden that is currently concrete but i would like to lay it with artificial lawn. is there a way of doing this without having to dig up all of the old concrete?

All information and hints on the subject apreciated smile

jke11y

3,195 posts

261 months

Sunday 16th October 2011
quotequote all
Have a hunt around the net, but I was at a customers house last week and they had just had easigrass laid; they compact the soil then put down underlay that looks like mashed up rubber, then grass stuff on top. Felt great, and can lay on concrete.

CO2000

3,177 posts

233 months

Monday 17th October 2011
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Look on ebay for a guy selling artificial putting greens, I'm thinking about getting one as they look pretty good.
Ask for a sample + instructions to be sent to you. £56 for each 1m x 2m if I remember correctly & widths of 2m or 4m(+ lengths of something like 12M)

Edited by CO2000 on Monday 17th October 16:07

OdramaSwimLaden

1,971 posts

193 months

Monday 17th October 2011
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jke11y said:
Felt great
No, he wants artificial lawn...... hehe

Pints

18,450 posts

218 months

Monday 17th October 2011
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I had LazyLawns do mine. Very happy with it.
I posted pics and a thread up here a while ago. I'll see if I can find it.

Edit: Here you go

Edited by Pints on Monday 17th October 15:39

pidsy

8,610 posts

181 months

Monday 17th October 2011
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another vote for lazylawn.

had the 1st school play areas laid with it last year. quality stuff.

pidsy

8,610 posts

181 months

Monday 17th October 2011
quotequote all
and i see you are local. one of our contractors is a lazylawn official installer. PM me if you want any more info, or if you want to pop down and see ours.

RemainAllHoof

79,541 posts

306 months

Monday 17th October 2011
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A quick read of that thread would suggest that I'd have to vacuum clean it rather than mow it. Not sure it's a step forward!

Pints

18,450 posts

218 months

Monday 17th October 2011
quotequote all
RemainAllHoof said:
A quick read of that thread would suggest that I'd have to vacuum clean it rather than mow it. Not sure it's a step forward!
I've not had a problem. Every so often I get a few leaves blow into the garden, and a quick sweep with the broom sorts it.
Would definitely not recommend vacuuming it.

pidsy

8,610 posts

181 months

Monday 17th October 2011
quotequote all
Dont vacuum, just hose down and brush.