five days
A two-way road or driveway should be 18'-22'. A two-way drive in a parking lot with parking spaces on both sides should be 32'-35' wide.
No - concrete actually contains cement, along with some sort of course aggregate (usually gravel or other small rocks), a fine aggregate (typically sand), and water. Cement alone is not very structurally sound (you would not be able to drive on a cement driveway without it splitting into lots of little pieces, for example).
The amount of weight a concrete driveway will hold without doing damage would be determined on many factors. For instance, consolidated area of weight..ie.#'s per sq. foot, concrete strenght, amount of reinfocement in concrete, compaction of soil under concrete when placed, thickness of concrete, etc. Most driveways should be able to handle a concrete delivery truck if the drive way doesnt have any abrupt edges that truck must cross and the tires stay a reasonable distance from the edges..Hope this helped..and enjoy the pool if that is your project
at the beginning before the start of the actual installation process the installer prompts for this setup
Umm, they really dont drive?? people drive them, you need to learn to drive then you can drive the car... it's quite obvious really......
Hello, Before you park the car I guess you drive on..."it" ... Driveway ;) parkit doesn't sound good parkway sound like a street or something.
driveway
form_title= Driveway Paving form_header= Keep your drive smooth. What is the size of your driveway?*= _ [50] Do you want a concrete driveway?*= () Yes () No When do you need the project completed?*= _ [50]
We drive on a parkway and park on a driveway because a parkway is defined a "a broad landscaped thoroughfare" and a driveway is defined as "a private road giving access from a public way to a building on abutting grounds."
i have no clue!
You can also park in a parking lot and drive in a driveway
A garage obviously
The Winchester was permanently sealed in its container, free from dust particles
Yes it is legal to block your own driveway.No.yesnono
Because the original intention for installing a driveway was, and still is, to provide a paved way to drive onto the property and, when there is one, to drive to the garage.
The car that is moving is normally the one at fault. No matter how someone is positioned you should not drive into them (going forward or in reverse). It therefore seems to me that the car backing out of the driveway is at fault.
you put in a window and a driveway in front of it...i know, im a genius!