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Not enough information. 8x8 what?
155 Get 170 to be safe.
One should do it!
Two pavers of 16 ft x 16 ft will be sufficient.
The answer will depend on whether the pavers are 16cm x 16 cm or 16 inch x16 inch. In the unlikely event that they are 16 ft*16 ft, you will need fewer than 1. Unfortunately, you have chosen not to share the units used and so no proper answer is possible.
Not enough information. 8x8 what?
155 Get 170 to be safe.
In a perfect world, 225 will do it. In real life, better buy about 300
One should do it!
Two pavers of 16 ft x 16 ft will be sufficient.
Area of 1 paver = 16*16 = 256 square units. Area of patio = 20*20 = 400 square units. Number of pavers required = Area of patio/Area of paver = 400/256 = 1.5625 So 2 pavers will suffice.
The answer will depend on whether the pavers are 16cm x 16 cm or 16 inch x16 inch. In the unlikely event that they are 16 ft*16 ft, you will need fewer than 1. Unfortunately, you have chosen not to share the units used and so no proper answer is possible.
You would need 54 tiles. The area is just over 53 tiles in coverage.
The patio is 10x 12 = 120 sq ft or 17,280 sq in The pavers are 16x16 = 256 sq in So you need 17280/256 = 68 pavers
One. At 16 x 16, the paver is bigger than the patio which is only 14 x 10.
One should be more than enough!
12' x 16' = 192 sq.ft. If the paver is 4 inch by 8 inch then its area = 32 sq.inches = 0.22222 sq.ft. 192/0.22222 = 864 pavers required. That is the nett requirement and does not include wastage caused by skewness, breakages, offcuts etc.