PORCELAIN PAVER WALKWAY
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- čas přidán 14. 06. 2024
- This DIY porcelain paver walkway project is all about how to install a paver walkway from start to finish. This is a full walkway makeover tutorial that shows how to transform your walkway in a few easy steps. Bring Your Own Tools (#BYOTools 131).
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Material List:
-⅝” Crushed Rock
-Construction Sand homedepot.sjv.io/6bPAPQ
-Porcelain Pavers homedepot.sjv.io/OR9n9Z
-Landscape Rocks homedepot.sjv.io/vn4y43
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MUSIC:
Min0:00 - Venice Beach: Topher Mohr & Alex Elena
Min11:27 - Pata Pata: Miriam Makeba (Matt Cherne Remix) www.chernebeats.com - Jak na to + styl
As a South African, it makes me happy to hear Pata Pata (the song at the end) being played on an international platform
This is exactly what I am wanting to do in my backyard! Thank you!!
Love your buddy right there by your side keeping you company! Nothing beats a faithful best friend like that!
I know the feeling of forgetting a step when installing pavers. In my case, I had forgotten to put down the polypropylene paver base panel. I was wondering why I had to use so much sand. Realizing my error, I took up everything and redid it. And, yes, it was extremely hot when I did this.
Beautifully done, Brent. I always love your projects.
We all make mistakes sometimes Lisa but we just need to work through them. Sorry to hear it was HOT for you to haha! Makes the job harder that’s for sure :) thanks so much for the support,
You should actually pitch the surface away from your house, so when it rains the water is flowing away from your foundation.
Yeah I was wondering when he was going to cover that step
Good point, but as all the layers are draining water (absorbent), wouldn't it be counterproductive to raise the level close to the house? if it was a solid concrete e.g. it should've been lean away from the house, for sue. I rather asking it then stating :/
I was going to ask about drainage. Since that a big problem I have with mine. It’s a swamp when it rains, that’s also the side where my supply (water) line, gas line and electric meter, and lan line from phone route to the home. My concern is I’ve had the supply line replace several years ago, I’m not so sure how deep it’s buried as well as about 15 years ago I did a poor job of putting in a French drain and now debunk under ground sprinkler.
Definitely noted.
Yep. You should do about 1/8th inch per foot of slope. Some people do 1/4th inch per foot. Either is fine. It's probably more important for a patio, though.
The dog is the perfect supervisor, he needs to watch you more often.
But Kona just stood there and didn’t say a thing to me as I forgot the weed barrier. Apparently not the best supervisor and was lounging around on the job lol! Thanks so much for watching :)
@@BYOTools seems to me that’s what bosses do. Like my dogs they only say something if I’m doing it wrong lol
@@BYOTools Doggo had more important things on the mind, like food?
Love the music during the finished product of each video!
He is cute and I love his calm voice!!!
This kept me mesmerized. Great work. Thanks for all the information.
Impressive! I wish all contractors did such detailed prep work and completion.
The song at the end!! The South African in me loooved [!! Phataphata!
Looks really good man you are a perfectionist i can tell.
This young man have a beautiful melody voice 😊❗️love his demostración 👍🇦🇷 also😄
Every project is a beauty! Great work!!
One of my favorite building projects! Especially with recycled materials.
Well done. Great step by step.
Ahhh Love the dog! tx for having him in the video. My dog do gardening with me.
It looks harder than I thought. I thought you just remove grass, put some rocks and place the tiles on top😄. I learnt the right way.
Looks amazing! Can't image that job in the blazing sun, though....phew, nice work, Brent!
Yep it was a rough one with the sun Kathleen but we got through it haha! Thanks so much for watching
This is what I want for the front of my house. I do have to hire someone to do for me, for my hubby has Parkinson's and he cannot do it. You did an amazing job.
nice project with just one video and without part 1 of 2 and 2 of 3
Well explained thank you!
Important to note that it should be sloped ever so slightly AWAY from the foundation, aka: positive drainage, to prevent water from going into the basement in areas with rain or wet ground.
Great company to work with!!
Best Service in Houston, Texas !!
Air Duct Cleaning made my house smell so much better!
Call these guys they know what they are doing!!
Thank you for the tutorial and the explanation !!
No problem hamdi and thanks so much for watching. Greatly appreciate the support.
I was taught to add a few bags of cement to the sub base to stabilise it so heavy rain won't scour out underneath
Love to hear Miriam Makeba in the soundtrack.
Great job 👍
nice! looks great!
Thank you for this video! Got done with my walkway! It was very helpful. Wish I could share a picture here
hey brent,i love the fence and i love this style of walkway. its simple. just my style. i think ill do this all the time now.
We settled on this style of walkway a couple years ago. Here are a few tips. 1. Don't put the path so close to the house. You might be able to walk on it, but you cannot carry anything in the wall side hand without smacking the house. 2. Forget about plastic weed barrier. It doesn't work and you don't need it anyway. 3. Use steel landscaping border, not plastic. 4. Don't put sand around the pavers before the rock. 5. HD and Lowe's sell a polyprop paver base you can use instead of all that sand and rock. It's expensive, but it replaces a lot of steps and a lot of materials. I have about $800 worth of it in my garage waiting on the next project. 6. Get the ground sort of even and sloping away from the house, lay down the paver base, place the stones using a 2x2 to separate the pavers equally, then pour 1/2 or 3/4-inch chipped gravel (not rounded gravel) around the stones. Chipped stones interlock and stay in place while round stones never settle. I leave about 1/4-inch of the paver stones above the chipped stones.
@@dchall8 thanks for this. i dont know how to do concrete and this method is achievable.
@@spicynomad I don't do concrete either. I do it the way I described.
Quick tip - pull the tail gate off when shoveling out bulk material. Saves you from shoveling the material that extra distance. Also, it will be less work to shovel from in the truck.
Unloaders work great as well
Never thought about yanking tail gate off. Good idea
Love your shirt 😎
Thanks for sharing your lovely tip .will try. To remember now friends ❤️👍🙏👌
Lookings amazing.
That looks great! I might try this.
Great to hear Daniel and thanks so much for watching.
Nice walkway!
thankyou so much beta gee!
I see pup is there to supervise... 😆
great job!
sei bravissimo complimenti
U killin it..thx
Great job
Hey Brent, pretty neat job, again ;)
Just a quick question (it is not related to the main project this time) at 11:46, I could spot a few bottles of epoxy/glue. Isn't direct sunlight damaging it's consistency or fluidity on a long run? Or you don't generally have that much sunlight for which you should care? :) Cheers and thanks for teaching us!
Very helpful, thanks so much! I'm not making a walkway but an area for large potted plants, but I'm assuming the construction is similar.
Thank you
Lol, the Makeba at the end caught me by surprise there lol
👍 Danke fürs Hochladen!
👍 Thanks for uploading!
👍 Very good and beautiful, thank you!
👍 Sehr gut und schön, danke!
Nice work! I didn't see that you sloped the walkway to the grass . Is that a necessary thing to do to have water drain away from the foundation?
Very nice!
Thank you - helpful video! How has the walkway held up over time? Is there anything you would do differently in hindsight? Thanks!!
I am actually commenting instead of saying first not gunna lie you are just so good at this man keep up the great work
Great to hear man and thanks so much for your support. Truly appreciated and thanks for being on top of your video notifications :)
Very nice ,
Nice job Brent!!👍👍
Thanks so much Bryan and thanks for the continued support.
@@BYOTools you are welcome!!👍
Nicely and Nicely and more Nicely
Very the perfectionist guy
what about levelling the tiles a little bit away from the house in order to prevent raining water to fall back to the house?
Awesome
When the dog mentioned "definitely overkill", his though is "no more sidewalk dirt for me to play anymore" lol
Great instruction guide. Just a question - The area I intend is not a flat piece of ground, it more like a low arc shape and wondered if it is possible to lay the paving stones on this type of land. It is diffficultto make it flat because the waste/water pipes are just below the surface.
Great video...just wondering why you wouldn't want a small grade away from your structure for drainage purposes?
Great job! Could you make a video showing how to install a French drain?
I'm wanting to do something similar with my front walkway, but after putting together a test area a couple years back when I first bought the house, I've found that while the week barrier keeps weeds from poking up through, just having stone on top creates a dirt trap, and weeds constantly grow from just that. Treating the area with weed killer would result in going through several gallons of the stuff per week, at now close to $40 per gallon. Not sure what the solution is, yet, but hopefully I can find something!
Kona won this video. Love that freaking dog.
He just loves hanging with dad during construction projects around the house haha! Thanks for watching Jake.
Nice
You might want to route the runnoff from that downspout out to a rain garden type thing.
was this about 20 linear ft in length ? just trying to calculate the size of this runway as I am looking to do 30 feet. Did you get a cubic yard of each , sand / crushed / pebbles?
can you post a video of the downspout drain project you did? am interested in what you did. thanks.
That is my fall project coming up because it is way too hot right now. Nice outcome. Just curious how many yards or "buckets" per trip of sand and rock did your Tacoma handle. I got the crew cab with a shorter bed so I dont think I could carry that much.
Mucho trabajo la verdad
Do you leave or remove the black rubber after your done?
You inspire me and coincidentally doing exactly the same Sexy Beast. But with two tiles and natural white stones embedded in between
I was wondering if you could share the quantity of crushed stone, stand and stone you used for this project
Why did you put sand on top of the weed blocker? Do I have to put extra sand if I put the weed blocker between base and sand? Thanks
This feels like a very nice approach which I'll be adopting in my yard. Only question is why even both with the weed barrier? The only growth you'll need to deal with will be rooting on top of it. If anything super aggressive does manage to come up through compacted aggregate from underneath it would probably defeat a weed barrier anyway. I think they're pointless in this application.
How have these held up? I'm looking into using them in my house.
What is the system for water drainage away from house? Shouldn't the base be angled slightly, so that the water doesn't drain into the foundation of the house?
Is the edging necessary if it's just flower beds next to the path?
In that type of pavers laying. Sand will not work in the long run. You’re better off using cement as your base. Remember, those are pretty much free standing pavers that are not compacted and they will uneven, even with moderate use. The sand will just eventually wash away.
Well done. Will the pavers move if they are not on sand and cement?
Yes they will shift if left on top of bare dirt. They’ll float around especially when rain comes. U can buy the wall anchor that hold the pavers in one spot but I would hurry it essentially
Love those porcelain peivers! Great choice
Um... I just compacted the ground, set pavers in level, used anchors around boarders.. still good 10 years later.
Um… good for you
(I replied with the below comment to a sub-comment, but felt it may be important to add to the general comments, so I added it here as well for more to see)
Wondering where the water will go once it penetrates the top layer of rock?
The gravel had fines in it, and compacted, limits the air or void between them. Plus the dirt under the gravel is compacted level. Any water penetrating down to the dirt, will fan out i'd bet, and that means water going towards the house.
I am not sure what climate this is in, but where I live in the north, this can lead to issues getting into winter and in thaw, especially if there is no french drain around the foundation.
But - even with the french drain - I would also like to add, you likely don't want humidity in your foundation/basement walls either, so I suppose even areas without freeze, you'd want to make sure you have a 1" drop per each foot away of the house, for at leat the same depth of your basement below grade. (So if you basement is 5 feet below grade, then a 5 foot grade drop of 5 " would be great to keep water away from the house)
Wow
I’ve compacted the ground, placed weed barrier, and compacted the rock so far. Am I good to lay sand on top of compacted rock then compact the first layer of sand? Also, do I need to hand spread a small layer of sand for the paver to sit in directly?
Put your pipes in first and get them level exactly how you want them, throw a layer of sand, tamp that with hand tamper, thrown more sand, screed the sand, take pipes out, fill in cracks with little handfuls of sand. Now you know for a fact the sand is perfectly level all way across and you’re ready to lay the pavers.
Hello, I wanted to look up the paver you listed but the link doesn't seem to work. Do you have a name or item # for it, that I can look for on HD website? Thanks
Se y beast bro.
How do those pavers stand up to freezing?
How do the porcelain pavers fare in a northern climate with freeze thaw in winter?
Always great, Brent! I forwarded this episode to a friend, hoping you don't mind! 💫
John that is exactly what I want to hear from all of my BYOT supporters. Thank you so much for watching and sharing it. That helps the channel in so many ways.
Can this type of paver be installed with cement
I dont have a slope like you do, so if I were to slope it away from the house, would I slope it with the rock base or sand with the pvc pipes? Oh and some solar lights would look great near the pavers. Great work. Thanks
He definitely should have sloped it away from the house. So important.
Depends. That’s why he used the drain rocks so water can freely drain into it and not create a puddle flood of water
It’s also preference… I don’t like sloped cement or this project. I like it leveled!
Just wondering can this be done on a slope ?
How'd this hold up without the barrier? It is meant to hold the sand in place but it's installed over it in this video.
Question, do you not need any gradient on the side to run the water away from your property when it rains? You are doing your pavers perfectly flat.
Yes he should have sloped away from the house.
I’m undecided on slope for a paver walkway like this. For impermeable surfaces like concrete, 100% you need a slope away from the house. But the layers of absorption built up by sand, gravel, and more sand between the pavers, I could see adequate drainage away from the house to the sloping grass.
Good question and I understand your concern but I assure you there will be no problem with moisture in my situation. One because I have a concrete foundation and two having rain hitting the pavers and pour away from the house will do nothing for this small of space. If it was a large paver patio area I would for sure angle the pavers away from the house. Hope that makes sense and thanks for watching in any case.
@@BYOTools , You are incorrect about not needing to slope away from house. A concrete foundation is one of the reasons you need to slope away. Also, the best thing to do would have been to slope the dirt, then put 6 mil plastic, then put the road base, sand, etc. It’s really important to slope away and use plastic.
@@judyl.761 I'm curious about this. Since you suggest using base and sand on top of the plastic, weeds are going to take root in those materials. So what is the reason for the plastic? The only reason I can think of is to keep the base and sand from sinking into and mixing with the soil. Is that what you're thinking?
Using sand and cement mix is a lot better in my opinion
Just did a similar project myself. A couple differences I did were:
1. Put the weed barrier underneath the crushed gravel.
2. Used 4 inches of gravel.
3. Used a tamper which is fun and works just as well imo.
4. Used an inch of sand.
5. Made sure it was level but with a slight decline away from the house as well.
6. Used edging that had holes for stakes to keep the line secure and straight.
7. Used 12"x12" permeable pavers and marble chips around them. (Looks great except for when the sun hits the white marble chips it's kind of blinds me... oops.)
All in all well done. Thanks for sharing. Always good to see how others adjust for mistakes, which I thought you did very well.
I was just gonna say this with our using concrete as the base under the paver, it’s guaranteed weeds
@@chrismorton2741 between what layers would you say is optimal to put that weed barrier?
Great project. I think I would have tried to avoid that downspout and drain area some how.
Thanks for watching Terri. What is your concern with the downspout area?
@@BYOTools My concern with it is you have to leap from one paver to the next and try to miss the downspout while you're carrying a baby in one arm and groceries in the other. IMHO the edge of the stones closest to the house should be at least 12 inches away from the drain. And the pavers should be evenly spaced 1 to 2 inches apart.
@@dchall8: Think, work, and create accordingly so that things match up correctly.
I would have graded the walkway to slightly slope away from the house.
Was there any drainage issue?
How’s the rock hold during the winter when shovelling the snow?
You can't use it! shovel next to it 😂 we don't know if it's snow there