That depends how wide you want the driveway ! A driveway 10 feet wide would be 35 feet long, but - a driveway just 8 feet wide just 7 feet wide would be 50 feet long !
Measure how long it is and multiply that number times how wide it is.
There is no such thing as a "cubic square" unless you happen to live in five dimensional space. Assuming that you do not, please resubmit the corrected question.
Answer: 1 m2 = 2.59 km2 5262 m2 = 13,628.5 km2 Answer: You can convert square miles to square kilometers, or miles to kilometers. But you can't convert square miles to kilometers.
It depends on how far the house is from the pavement as to how long is a driveway!
That depends how wide you want the driveway ! A driveway 10 feet wide would be 35 feet long, but - a driveway just 8 feet wide just 7 feet wide would be 50 feet long !
It really depends how long the driveway is and what company u get it done by
Measure how long it is and multiply that number times how wide it is.
199.5 square feet
Area = 14*100 = 1400 square feet
12 x 40 = 480 square feet
There is no such thing as a "cubic square" unless you happen to live in five dimensional space. Assuming that you do not, please resubmit the corrected question.
Kevin's driveway is approximately 10 meters long. 1 yard is equivalent to 0.9144 meters.
Answer: 1 m2 = 2.59 km2 5262 m2 = 13,628.5 km2 Answer: You can convert square miles to square kilometers, or miles to kilometers. But you can't convert square miles to kilometers.
Linear meters do not convert into square meters, unless you multiply them by another dimension. For example, if you have a yard that is 120 meters long and 100 meters wide, it would have an area of 12,000 square meters.
It depends on how far the house is from the pavement as to how long is a driveway!
It all depends on whether or no the driveway culvert is covered by a covered peril listed in your policy and that there is not an exclusion which would then exclude coverage. For example if your policy has the peril of "vehicle collision" in it, and a vehicle collided with the driveway culvert and caused the damage, it would be covered as long as there is not an exclusion saying it would not be covered for some reason. Also, you would have to own the driveway culvert and not the city, as your policy only property you own.