Комментарии:
How are the blocks held together? I don't see the contractors using any type of glue, it appears they are just placing the stones on the deck?
ОтветитьThis looks great but what about the added weight? How heavy is all that stone/tiles?
ОтветитьUsing pavers that thick will need an engineer to design your deck. Thats a lot of weight
ОтветитьI know this video is old but, for those of you thinking about using this product, it is REALLY unnecessary and WAY overpriced. $15 for ONE tile? So over $1,200 just in this tile for a 16' x 10' deck.
If you already have a deck with deck boards on it, you can simply put a barrier (poly plastic sheeting) over the deck so you're locking sand doesn't just fall to the ground. If you're building a new deck, you have 2 options, A) space the joists 6' OC (for 12' pavers) or B) cover the regular 16' OC joists with 3/4" PT plywood or 5/4" deck boards. The main thing to remember is to have a beam in the middle of the joists and if you're pavers are small, you need to have support under them; this is why ideally you'd want plywood or deck boards in place. Still WAY cheaper than this stuff.
What about the wood under it if it doesn’t dry mold at rot will a cure
ОтветитьAt 8.75 dollars a square foot, this product is way over priced for recycled plastic! It should be in the three dollar range. Shame on you!
ОтветитьWhy do you need those grates when you can just use 4x8 wood and install your floor over that?
ОтветитьCan this be used directly on the ground?
ОтветитьRecommend builders in Texas?
ОтветитьIs this silica? (Ie, manufactured stone that causes silicosis?)
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