Wiki User
∙ 10y agoYou would need exactly 36 pavers.
Wiki User
∙ 10y agoIt would depend on whether they are 14 foot pavers, 14 inch pavers, 14 centimetre pavers or some other measurement unit!
164
135 Always get extra for breakage.
ANSWER 16 x 16 inch = 1.78 sq.feet 120 / 1.78 = 67.42 so you need to have 68 pavers The plot is 144 inches wide. 144/16=9 pavers wide. The short dimension is 120 inches which would require 8 pavers with the final row of pavers cut to fit. Thus in a 9 X 8 paver grid you'd need 68 pavers, but 4 of those pavers would have to be cut in half for the final row.
1foot=0.3048meter 16foot = 4.8768meter 8foot = 2.4384meter 4.8m by 2.4m = 11.89m2
There are 12 inches in a foot. Therefore the 24 inch pavers are 2 foot pavers each with an area of 2*2 = 4 square feet. The area to be paved measures 10*2 = 20 square feet. Therefore you will need 20/4 = 5 pavers.
6x3 would require 2 pavers by 4 pavers to make a square foot which is 8 pavers per square foot. 240 pavers. That's only a 5 foot by 6 foot square.
27 of them. Get 30 to be safe.
It would depend on whether they are 14 foot pavers, 14 inch pavers, 14 centimetre pavers or some other measurement unit!
164
8 foot
4 per foot = 48 sq feet. 192 pavers will cover a 6ft x 8ft area
135 Always get extra for breakage.
How many brick pavers in a square foot
ANSWER 16 x 16 inch = 1.78 sq.feet 120 / 1.78 = 67.42 so you need to have 68 pavers The plot is 144 inches wide. 144/16=9 pavers wide. The short dimension is 120 inches which would require 8 pavers with the final row of pavers cut to fit. Thus in a 9 X 8 paver grid you'd need 68 pavers, but 4 of those pavers would have to be cut in half for the final row.
1foot=0.3048meter 16foot = 4.8768meter 8foot = 2.4384meter 4.8m by 2.4m = 11.89m2
Area of each paver = 4"x9" = (1/3)'x(3/4)' = 1/4 sq ft. Number of pavers required = Total Area/Area of Each Paver = 500/ (1/4) = 2000 pavers. In real life, though, the number of pavers will depend on the shape and exact dimensions of the area, how many pavers you need to cut or trim, what the wastage is.