Demolition of temporary sidewalk crossing

  • Erstellt am 2022-09-15 09:34:41

julimos

2022-09-15 09:34:41
  • #1
Hello everyone,
has anyone ever ripped up such a sidewalk crossing themselves and has tips on how to proceed?
It is (probably) Asphalt 50/70, then fleece and underneath sidewalk slabs.
My idea was to try an 18kg demolition hammer on a trolley with a wide chisel in order to damage the slabs underneath as little as possible (but probably some are broken anyway, so if a few break it’s not a big deal).

Does anyone have other ideas or tips?
Thanks to you all!!!
Best regards
 

motorradsilke

2022-09-15 09:38:48
  • #2
And what do you do with the asphalt then?
 

julimos

2022-09-15 11:27:10
  • #3
Valid question. There are disposal companies here that accept it as regular construction waste in the container, or sorted somewhat cheaper. Do you have any further ideas on how to proceed?
 

motorradsilke

2022-09-15 13:59:50
  • #4

No, I don't. I'm also still looking for a way to get rid of it cheaply.
If I wanted to do it myself, I would try a rotary hammer.
Somehow I had hoped that it could be reused.
 

WilderSueden

2022-09-15 14:50:25
  • #5
One could presumably use the chunks as homemade recycled gravel? In an area with high load, I would rather not do that now because of undefined load-bearing capacity, but under a footpath that should actually be okay.
 

Yaso2.0

2022-09-27 10:59:18
  • #6


And what do you do then, do you have it completely repaved?

In front of my house it also looks like a patchwork.. our landscaping company said they were not allowed to pave it because it is public property…
 

Similar topics
28.11.2018Pave a 100m² driveway49
31.08.2017Pave inclined surface12
10.04.2019Paving up to the door - how to finish?15
20.02.2020Paving and Drainage DIY14
25.02.2021Pave the driveway, carport later - procedure?24
27.02.2021Costs for paving the driveway21
11.01.2023Paving the terrace for a new construction of a "low-built" single-family house18

Oben