2.37 cubic yards of dirt is needed to fill an 8'X4' that is 24" deep garden box. If the box is filled 12 inches, the amount of soil needed is 1.19 cubic yards and that should be deep enough for most vegetables.
This question is about a cubed area. First convert the inches to feet--18 inches is 1.5 feet. Then multiply all three numbers by each other. 15*12*1.5 is 270. You will need 270 cubed feet of dirt to fill the area.
133.33 cubic yards, that's 400 feet
42 cubic feet or 1.56 yards.
How deep? 1 inch will take .7 yards
without knowing the actual lengths of the shallow and deep ends, nothing more than a very loose ballpark number is possible.
If the raised garden has dimensions of 5 x 5 x 1 then it requires 25 cubic feet of dirt to fill it.
1 foot by 36 sq feet = 36 cubic feet of dirt is needed
10-1/2 cubic yards
10*13*3 = 390 cubic inches.
2.37 cubic yards.
if you mean a 30 foot diameter circle, then pi x 152 x 3 = 2119.5 cubic feet of dirt
Depends on how deep you want to fill it...
Assuming a rectangular (3-D) shape, multiply the three numbers. The answer will be in cubic feet.
No. - Fill dirt is usually junk, often from demolition.
Forever? Fill it with dirt & plant a garden.
Forever? Fill it with dirt & plant a garden.
The question cannot be answered in a sensible way. The size of the hole is given in only two dimensions - in all likelihood, that means the area that the hole covers but not how deep it is. The amount of dirt required to fill the hole will depend on the depth of the hole as well.