You need to find the volume of the box. The formula for this is length × width × height. It doesn't matter what number you assign to a variable because it will be the same volume. 10 × 8 × 1 = 80 ft3. So you need 80 ft3 of dirt to fill the rectangular garden.
108 cubic feet.
There is NO dirt, it is a hole! If you want to fill it with dirt, that is 4x6x12=288 cubic feet, weighing about 28,800 pounds
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The answer will vary slightly depending on assumptions: will the slabs have a space between them, and will you be cutting the slabs to fill fractions. 21 feet is equal to 14.2 of the 450 mm slabs. 19 feet is equal to 12.9 of the slabs. To complete the rectangular area, 14.2 x 12.9 = 183 slabs.
The answer will depend on the depth to which the area is covered.
108 cubic feet.
No. - Fill dirt is usually junk, often from demolition.
The area of the garden is 9 x 4= 36 ft2, so the volume of dirt you need would be length x width x depth. Since you didn't say what the depth was, the number of bags of dirt, which is equal to the volume you want to fill in cubic feet is just 36 x the depth you want to fill with dirt. If you only want to have about a 2 inch layer of dirt all over your garden, you need 36 ft2 x 1/6 ft = 6 cubic feet = 6 bags of dirt. Good luck!
Forever? Fill it with dirt & plant a garden.
Forever? Fill it with dirt & plant a garden.
There is NO dirt, it is a hole! If you want to fill it with dirt, that is 4x6x12=288 cubic feet, weighing about 28,800 pounds
Yes as it would be an area that can fill with dirt or "grease" as it be.
Depends on the density of the dirt... howver, I can tell you that the volume of that area is 495 cubic feet.
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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.
To calculate the volume of dirt needed to fill a circular area, you first need to find the area of the circle (πr^2, where r is the radius). In this case, for a 14-foot circle, the radius is 7 feet. Once you find the area, you can calculate the volume of dirt needed based on the desired depth of filling the circle.
Assuming a rectangular (3-D) shape, multiply the three numbers. The answer will be in cubic feet.