Pavestone Company has manufactured segmental concrete products for the commercial, residential, contractor, industrial and retail consumer, markets since 1980. Dedicated to the production of the concrete pave stone and retaining wall units, our business principle is to be driven not only by technology in manufacturing, but also in the development of segmental paving and retaining wall systems. Now with 20 regional manufacturing locations, distributing to over 40 states, Pavestone Company continues to set the standards for service to the buyer, specifier and contractor!
For more on Pavestone products and projects, visit: www.Pavestone.com
I read that 2-3 inches of mulch is okay. Can anyone confirm/deny? Also- what do yall think he used to get the ground flat in the circle containing the stones? Thanks in advance :-)
Instructions are contradictory. They say for tall walls, dig 8" and bury a full block. One Pavestone block product is 6" tall, so that would leave 2" for base material. Yet the video also says for tall walls, use 4" of base material. It would be nice if they'd make up their minds.
Do you have a video on the install process on the "Rockwall Large" So frustrating I'm 60 miles from Montgomery I can come to you if you have written directions, nothing came with the 8 pallets we bought, maybe because we bought from homedepot!
I am planning to lay pavers down near my front porch, but I was always nervous about the task and it seemed so difficult, however this video did a wonderful job explaining it..Thanks for this!
Thanks for this video. What on earth is that gross sound between segments supposed to be, though? It sounds like somebody has a barn to be mucked who hasn't done it in a while.Yo associate that sound with your logo is highly inadvisable.
Being in the roofing (water infiltration) business for over 42 years, placing pavers above slab line will always allow water under your exterior walls. I have seen this hundreds of times! Keep everything at least two inches below top of slab.
Thank you for the video! And for showing the viewers alternate solutions to cutting/splitting stones *without* the use of a stone-cutting saw. While all parts of the video were useful to me, these 2 suggestions were the most useful to me (my project is so small, purchasing or even renting a stone cutter would be wasteful on so many levels).
Those are really nice Patio stones! I'm interested to see if it will go well with my landscaping. One of the best landscaping contractors Colorado Springs Co here is purelyponds.com/ and they did my landscaping last year. I hope they have a supplier for these kinds of stones.