155
Get 170 to be safe.
Patio is 96 inches each side. If you do not intend to get into jigsaw puzzles you will need 5 pavers per side, a total of 25. These will cover an area 100 x 100 inches
12 x 8 = 96 !
78.47 Pavers
To calculate the number of 15.7-inch patio stone pavers needed for an 8 by 15-foot patio, first convert the patio dimensions to inches: 8 feet = 96 inches and 15 feet = 180 inches. The area of the patio is 96 inches × 180 inches = 17,280 square inches. Each paver has an area of 15.7 inches × 15.7 inches = 246.49 square inches. Dividing the patio area by the paver area gives approximately 70 pavers needed (17,280 ÷ 246.49 ≈ 70).
119.808 or about 120
Patio is 96 inches each side. If you do not intend to get into jigsaw puzzles you will need 5 pavers per side, a total of 25. These will cover an area 100 x 100 inches
12 x 8 = 96 !
78.47 Pavers
119.808 or about 120
158 of them. Get extra for breakage.
In a perfect world, 225 will do it. In real life, better buy about 300
53 and 1/3 paving slabs exactly.
Each paver is 12" x 12" or 1 square foot. So, 200 ft2 * (1 paver/ 1 ft2) = 200 pavers
Assuming a 10 foot by 14 foot patio. Since the pavers are 2 feet by 2 feet you will need 5 to cover the 10 foot width and 7 to cover the 14 foot length the overall answer is 5 x 7 = 35
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.
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.
You would need exactly 36 pavers.