How to pour concrete for curved walkway to prevent cracking? Planned maintenance scheduled...

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How to pour concrete for curved walkway to prevent cracking?



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The front edge of my home slab is about 37 feet from the street. There is a 12*4 feet landing pad next to street and a 7*4 area next to front door. Originally there was a 33*4 rectangular walkway connecting the two. It has been removed and I want to rebuild a walkway in its place.



I am wondering if a curved walkway design resembling a tall trapezoid with curved sides and a wide base close to 12 feet and a narrow top close to 5 foot will be practical and good looking.



In particular I am concerned if the curved design is more prone to cracking and what to do to minimize it. How are spacers and rebars are to be placed?



enter image description here










share|improve this question























  • Mesh top and bottom (if thick enough) and pour it in squarish shapes with movement joints between.

    – Paul Uszak
    2 hours ago


















1















The front edge of my home slab is about 37 feet from the street. There is a 12*4 feet landing pad next to street and a 7*4 area next to front door. Originally there was a 33*4 rectangular walkway connecting the two. It has been removed and I want to rebuild a walkway in its place.



I am wondering if a curved walkway design resembling a tall trapezoid with curved sides and a wide base close to 12 feet and a narrow top close to 5 foot will be practical and good looking.



In particular I am concerned if the curved design is more prone to cracking and what to do to minimize it. How are spacers and rebars are to be placed?



enter image description here










share|improve this question























  • Mesh top and bottom (if thick enough) and pour it in squarish shapes with movement joints between.

    – Paul Uszak
    2 hours ago














1












1








1








The front edge of my home slab is about 37 feet from the street. There is a 12*4 feet landing pad next to street and a 7*4 area next to front door. Originally there was a 33*4 rectangular walkway connecting the two. It has been removed and I want to rebuild a walkway in its place.



I am wondering if a curved walkway design resembling a tall trapezoid with curved sides and a wide base close to 12 feet and a narrow top close to 5 foot will be practical and good looking.



In particular I am concerned if the curved design is more prone to cracking and what to do to minimize it. How are spacers and rebars are to be placed?



enter image description here










share|improve this question














The front edge of my home slab is about 37 feet from the street. There is a 12*4 feet landing pad next to street and a 7*4 area next to front door. Originally there was a 33*4 rectangular walkway connecting the two. It has been removed and I want to rebuild a walkway in its place.



I am wondering if a curved walkway design resembling a tall trapezoid with curved sides and a wide base close to 12 feet and a narrow top close to 5 foot will be practical and good looking.



In particular I am concerned if the curved design is more prone to cracking and what to do to minimize it. How are spacers and rebars are to be placed?



enter image description here







concrete sidewalk






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked 7 hours ago









MaesumiMaesumi

1366




1366













  • Mesh top and bottom (if thick enough) and pour it in squarish shapes with movement joints between.

    – Paul Uszak
    2 hours ago



















  • Mesh top and bottom (if thick enough) and pour it in squarish shapes with movement joints between.

    – Paul Uszak
    2 hours ago

















Mesh top and bottom (if thick enough) and pour it in squarish shapes with movement joints between.

– Paul Uszak
2 hours ago





Mesh top and bottom (if thick enough) and pour it in squarish shapes with movement joints between.

– Paul Uszak
2 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















3














Curved concrete drives and walkways are no more likely to crack than rectangular. I have a semi circular drive and a curved walk. The drive foundation was well packed and it has 1/2 rebar on roughly 18' centers ( we had some left over from the house) , it has handled 10,000+ lb. trucks, no problem . The walk, not so well packed and used only mesh : It has hairline cracks at some decorative brick inlays. So with good preparation and rebar you can make any shape you want.






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    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

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    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    3














    Curved concrete drives and walkways are no more likely to crack than rectangular. I have a semi circular drive and a curved walk. The drive foundation was well packed and it has 1/2 rebar on roughly 18' centers ( we had some left over from the house) , it has handled 10,000+ lb. trucks, no problem . The walk, not so well packed and used only mesh : It has hairline cracks at some decorative brick inlays. So with good preparation and rebar you can make any shape you want.






    share|improve this answer




























      3














      Curved concrete drives and walkways are no more likely to crack than rectangular. I have a semi circular drive and a curved walk. The drive foundation was well packed and it has 1/2 rebar on roughly 18' centers ( we had some left over from the house) , it has handled 10,000+ lb. trucks, no problem . The walk, not so well packed and used only mesh : It has hairline cracks at some decorative brick inlays. So with good preparation and rebar you can make any shape you want.






      share|improve this answer


























        3












        3








        3







        Curved concrete drives and walkways are no more likely to crack than rectangular. I have a semi circular drive and a curved walk. The drive foundation was well packed and it has 1/2 rebar on roughly 18' centers ( we had some left over from the house) , it has handled 10,000+ lb. trucks, no problem . The walk, not so well packed and used only mesh : It has hairline cracks at some decorative brick inlays. So with good preparation and rebar you can make any shape you want.






        share|improve this answer













        Curved concrete drives and walkways are no more likely to crack than rectangular. I have a semi circular drive and a curved walk. The drive foundation was well packed and it has 1/2 rebar on roughly 18' centers ( we had some left over from the house) , it has handled 10,000+ lb. trucks, no problem . The walk, not so well packed and used only mesh : It has hairline cracks at some decorative brick inlays. So with good preparation and rebar you can make any shape you want.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 3 hours ago









        blacksmith37blacksmith37

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