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beac

(9,992 posts)
Tue May 28, 2013, 03:52 PM May 2013

Anyone put in a patio in New England?

I've been researching the options for our soon-to-be home and gather that the hard freeze conditions and long winters must be considered when decided what kind of materials to use.

My preference would be for stone over brick.

Neither mr. beac or I have ever installed a patio, but we are both handy. Is this a possible DIY project or do the cold conditions require an expert?

12 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Anyone put in a patio in New England? (Original Post) beac May 2013 OP
Paving stones set into a well prepared sand bed Warpy May 2013 #1
Some tips on sand and pavers: jeff47 May 2013 #3
Thanks! Very helpful. beac May 2013 #4
I've also been reading about "floating" decks (not attached to house) beac May 2013 #5
No, joist hangers on the house Warpy May 2013 #7
Around here-Wisconsin- digonswine May 2013 #2
The leveling is another intimidating part. beac May 2013 #6
It truly needs to run off- digonswine May 2013 #8
Tell me when I've reach my annoying question limit but... beac May 2013 #9
Not annoying at all- digonswine May 2013 #10
One more thing- digonswine May 2013 #11
Yay for no weeding! beac May 2013 #12

Warpy

(111,156 posts)
1. Paving stones set into a well prepared sand bed
Tue May 28, 2013, 03:59 PM
May 2013

with more sand pushed into the cracks afterward are quite stable. Mortar isn't used in New England because it will eventually fail. Sand allows the pavers to shift just enough to avoid cracking, heaving, and other things that poured concrete is well known to do.

I didn't do a patio, I did a deck that was well off the ground. However, friends with more money than I had did the pavers and sand and it worked out very well for them. The only pain in the neck was occasionally pulling weeds out of the sand and then resanding the whole business, but that was minor, IMO.

jeff47

(26,549 posts)
3. Some tips on sand and pavers:
Tue May 28, 2013, 05:37 PM
May 2013

(for the OP)

1) Make sure you compact the sand after about every 2".
2) You'll want a few inches of pack material or sand under the pavers. The exact amount depends on how much clay there is in your soil. You'll probably need a minimum of 4".
3) If you want to avoid the weed problem, use polymeric sand for the sand-between-the-pavers. It has an additive that causes the sand to stick together better, thus preventing weeds while still allowing movement.

beac

(9,992 posts)
4. Thanks! Very helpful.
Tue May 28, 2013, 11:03 PM
May 2013

Definitely want to minimize weeds as I hate weeding (not that anyone LOVES weeding.)

beac

(9,992 posts)
5. I've also been reading about "floating" decks (not attached to house)
Tue May 28, 2013, 11:05 PM
May 2013

but got intimidated by the varying opinions on footings.

Is yours floating?

Warpy

(111,156 posts)
7. No, joist hangers on the house
Tue May 28, 2013, 11:15 PM
May 2013

and Lally columns along the outside, set into generous footings. It was built in 1978 and a quick look at Google Earth confirmed it's still holding up just fine.

The deck floor was 2x6 lumber set half an inch apart to allow water and snow melt to pass through rather than sit on the wood and encourage rot.

digonswine

(1,485 posts)
2. Around here-Wisconsin-
Tue May 28, 2013, 05:31 PM
May 2013

we do it by digging out the area about 11 inches deep. 7 inches or so of compacted road base(preferably limestone screenings), 1 inch of sand onto which the bricks(stones) go, with sand in between. That is the way we did it when I worked in the business. For more specifics, just ask. Accounting for drainage and leveling are quite vital as well.

beac

(9,992 posts)
6. The leveling is another intimidating part.
Tue May 28, 2013, 11:12 PM
May 2013

Does the sand cover the drainage or do you have to build in a slight slope for runoff?

Off to Google "limestone screenings" as that's a term I haven't seen as yet in my research.

digonswine

(1,485 posts)
8. It truly needs to run off-
Wed May 29, 2013, 07:30 AM
May 2013

so you need a slight slope-not too hard-a transit is best but you can use a long level or a level placed on a very straight board or whatever.

beac

(9,992 posts)
9. Tell me when I've reach my annoying question limit but...
Wed May 29, 2013, 08:57 AM
May 2013

Is there a time of year that it's better to install? i.e. does the patio need to "cure" any particular length of time before it meets winter cold/ice/snow?

digonswine

(1,485 posts)
10. Not annoying at all-
Wed May 29, 2013, 02:04 PM
May 2013

as long as it is fairly dry(not early Spring, melt-off) it doesn't matter much.

digonswine

(1,485 posts)
11. One more thing-
Thu May 30, 2013, 06:22 PM
May 2013

I was talking to the friend I worked for(landscaper). He agreed that it needed plenty of base and one inch of sand as the final material into which you lay the pavers.
Oh--there is no weeding with this method. I recently looked at a job we did in 2004-looks as good as when we put it in.
Also--a floating deck would be MUCH easier to do--but it still needs upkeep. Footings are easy and you don't need tons of material.
Feel free to ask anything else-I am an unemployed teacher that is subbing here and there. Any and all interaction is welcome!!!

beac

(9,992 posts)
12. Yay for no weeding!
Fri May 31, 2013, 10:54 PM
May 2013

And for teachers!! Many in my family, including mr beac.

Will definitely keep the annoying questions coming.

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