Using concrete slabs to "pave" some wet spots in a road.

   / Using concrete slabs to "pave" some wet spots in a road. #11  
If they’re fairly uniform slabs that you can fit together and make a decent road it might work but it sounds more like a mess to me.
 
   / Using concrete slabs to "pave" some wet spots in a road. #12  
I’m trying to figure out which is 15 and 40 feet long, the wet areas or the slabs of concrete? If the latter, I don’t see how it can hurt; especially if you fill underneath them first as others have suggested. Somewhere recently I’ve seen slabs of concrete from a bridge for sale. The only question I have in both instances is how do you set them?
 
   / Using concrete slabs to "pave" some wet spots in a road. #13  
If you have enough concrete slabs, lay them in two, three, or more layers, alternating joints, like bricks in a wall.

Bruce
 
   / Using concrete slabs to "pave" some wet spots in a road. #14  
Don't include me in the negative Nancy catagory. :) Just saye'en been there on a seemingly insolvable road, that just was a waste of time, as people did try to do it on the cheap. And it never worked cause the road was over a spring with clay as a base soil with no real other rock base set down. Heavy trucks would just blow the whole thing out, with one run. You need at least something under those pavers, to keep them from tilting.
 
   / Using concrete slabs to "pave" some wet spots in a road. #15  
This wouldn't be a TBN post if there wasn't at least 1 or 2 negative Nancy posts. I will let you all know how it goes.
You can negative nancyvall you want. I clean out chicken houses among other things I do. I know all about the pile of busted concrete over yonder and the wet ground over here to get in the chicken houses. I was on a tracked skid steer which makes things a little better. But you can't get a tractor over it at all. Go ahead and bury a truck. Ain't nothing like spending a couple of days getting a dump truck out.
 
   / Using concrete slabs to "pave" some wet spots in a road. #16  
You may get lucky, but roads/parking lots are a lot like computers: garbage in=garbage out.

if you get rid of the water first, it should dry on its on.
 
   / Using concrete slabs to "pave" some wet spots in a road. #17  
Why not try it in stages? Take a few concrete slabs placing them in the middle wet spot seeing how they do. That way you'll know how they react, stay or shift or tip.
I'm thinking step one would be trying to get water diverged by ditches would be best. Then concrete, rip rap going up to #57 gravel.
Depending on how wet, how deep that area is will determine how just putting concrete slabs on it reacts. A few inches of wet mud over firm ground is different than a few feet deep of swampy muck.
 
   / Using concrete slabs to "pave" some wet spots in a road. #18  
I believe the OP stated eight inch or so ruts on a stable bottom.

That’s not the bottomless swamp scenario that keeps getting quoted!
 
   / Using concrete slabs to "pave" some wet spots in a road. #19  
I have a section of road in my bottom land that stays consistently wet and muddy. The ruts are about 6 to 8 inches deep, so not bottomless and I am never worried about getting my tractor stuck. But I would like to have the option of getting trucks down there. A truck would probably have to get on it pretty good to get through there making a mess of the road and truck.

Here is my plan. A buddy down the road got swindled into accepting some loads of fill that have tons of rather large concrete slab pieces about 4 to 6" thick. My plan is to run my york rake through the muck and mud to make a rather level bed for the concrete "tiles" and lay them together as close as possible to pave a road through the wet spots. I think the mud will almost act like mortar. I will fill the voids between the slabs with mid sized rock chunks to hold it all together. These sections are about 40' long and about 15' long, so not huge.

Any tips, tricks, warnings? Good idea bad idea?
I fought similar problems for years, attempting similar solutions. It dawned on me that every road I drove on had water run under it in pipes of various sizes. So I took that route and started controlling the water. It was more work but did eliminate 98% of my problems. Others have come to see what I had done. My default statement is; 'Stop using your driveway as a drainage ditch'.
 
   / Using concrete slabs to "pave" some wet spots in a road.
  • Thread Starter
#20  
I fought similar problems for years, attempting similar solutions. It dawned on me that every road I drove on had water run under it in pipes of various sizes. So I took that route and started controlling the water. It was more work but did eliminate 98% of my problems. Others have come to see what I had done. My default statement is; 'Stop using your driveway as a drainage ditch'.
Excellent advice! Makes perfect sense.
The only problem is this area is along a creek and it floods 3-8 times a year. So unless I raise that area somehow it will always get wet and stay wet for awhile, generally most of the winter and spring.
 

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