Is the slope from the street to the house normal? Please provide feedback!

  • Erstellt am 2018-08-25 08:43:32

ypg

2018-08-25 10:32:13
  • #1


The paved area is laid out so that the rainwater is directed away from the house. About 2 cm slope per meter or so. At the front of the driveway, there is then a drainage channel.
 

Pädda

2018-08-25 20:42:24
  • #2
In that case, the gutters would have to be directly on the house. Currently, with us, the paving would lead the rain toward the house, or am I missing something?
 

ypg

2018-08-25 22:53:18
  • #3


Yes, you have a knot... read my post again, first sentence
 

Pädda

2018-10-09 06:54:39
  • #4
Thank you very much for your input. Maybe you can answer a question for me to understand better. When they talk about "Hauseckpunkte Fahrbahnoberkante Pflasterung Gelände 97,45hM," they mean the point up to which the paving can be laid at the highest, right, or am I wrong? So that is the height from which I have to calculate the slope? I am a bit confused because "OK EG FB" is given as 97,50hM, since, for example, you would have to pave up to 97,50hM at the front door?

Please tell me what I misunderstood...

Kind regards
Peter
 

Zaba12

2018-10-09 07:18:52
  • #5
Strange that you didn't talk about it with your planner. We also have a sloping plot and our planner came up with a proposal on how to position the house on the terrain. He explained the pros and cons to us and we weighed together how deep the house would go down. The goal was to set the house as deep as possible so that the crap doesn't come out of the shower drain on the ground floor when the sewer overflows, combined with keeping the L-stone height at the end of the property as low as possible.

Your situation is a bit different and, unlike me, rather relaxed. But to understand that, you simply uploaded the wrong photo. Upload the west and south sides respectively, or the section of the building.
 

Zaba12

2018-10-09 07:28:05
  • #6


Well, in my suspicion, your paving will follow the height of the street. Your house will be set level into the terrain.
At the garage, you will still be below street level and will need L-shaped curbstones to compensate vertically for the height. I assume that the southern left house corner reaches street level. The rest of the property from the mentioned house corner (there are only 75 cm left) can easily be secured with a slope. That is the most cost-effective alternative. Just try not to solve everything with L-shaped curbstones. The north side will already be expensive enough.
 

Similar topics
25.02.2015Terrace with corner slabs (L-shape). Implementation of slope12
23.07.2016Construction of the driveway with gravel, crushed stone, and paving18
31.08.2016What slope is still comfortable?12
21.11.2016Misplanning Bavaria - slope towards house and garage - instead of away23
27.04.2017Deep curbs for terrace construction - the slope is incorrect12
23.06.2017Change the slope of the garage roof10
09.08.2017Creating a terrace - problems with the slope18
07.01.2019House with slab foundation on a slope52
14.03.2019Paving not even and firm - what helps?38
07.01.2020Spreading agent / spreading material for ice for permeable paving11
21.01.2020permeable pavement20
29.05.2020Courtyard access, access paths paving or concreting28
24.09.2020Insufficient slope of the sewage pipe29
30.09.2021Slope of the garage - Which design?21
25.07.2023Permeable pavement, clay soil, general water management37
01.06.2023Absolutely unhappy with the new plaster, doesn't fit - please give tips26
10.08.2023Garage door height for new paving11
09.01.2024Is water seeping through the plaster?11
18.05.2024Driveway stones from Kann in light gray16

Oben