hiluxman
Well-known member
Where do you get them fromYeah can clad them or for £200 a block they’ll cast the stone in the mould for you
Where do you get them fromYeah can clad them or for £200 a block they’ll cast the stone in the mould for you
The joints catch the eye a bit I agree- but would prefer to look at that over sleeper wall or gabions myself- grow some roses up it etc would look a nice I thinkMight look ok on a motorway embankment but would look wank as a garden wall imho.
To be fair i say that not just in reference to the joints but also the fact that the stone would be completely out of place here as well.The joints catch the eye a bit I agree- but would prefer to look at that over sleeper wall or gabions myself- grow some roses up it etc would look a nice I think
I think they will use whatever stone you want.To be fair i say that not just in reference to the joints but also the fact that the stone would be completely out of place here as well.
Yeah but take them stone local to here and they won't know where to start and thats the thing about stonework its v area specific. Take that 20 mile in any direction from here it wouldn't look too out of place.I think they will use whatever stone you want.
I was meaning the local coloring rather than the style its layed, you can have three local masons with three styles.Yeah but take them stone local to here and they won't know where to start and thats the thing about stonework its v area specific. Take that 20 mile in any direction from here it wouldn't look too out of place.
Firm in Glossop called wot block they aren’t standard item but they’ll do them if requestedWhere do you get them from
I can see them being really useful on listed building projects where the client would like a close match to the original building but the conservation officer wants to have the curtilage easily distinguishable.Horses for courses good for rapid deployment of a quick wall or say into a watercourse etc but can just do concrete ones to be the mass then clad in local stone. They’d be out of place in Norfolk with flint walls etc but it’s local firm doing them snd you can take your own stone and set them into their moulds if you want
I can see them being really useful on listed building projects where the client would like a close match to the original building but the conservation officer wants to have the curtilage easily distinguishable.
I've also seen roads shut for months while all of the interested parties cover their arses, a known product with a custom face would have saved aggravation
![]()
Had normal ones from wot block before didn't realise they could do that aswellFirm in Glossop called wot block they aren’t standard item but they’ll do them if requested
I would love to do a bit of dry stone walling. It looks like the kind of job that would be very good for your head.I dunno- I do loads of retaining walls using nothing but dry stone granite- an engineer would probably have a fit- but often they're just replacing what has lasted 100 years or so. With dry stone you just need a bit of batter and some nice big lumps- I guess it's the natural alternative to Lego blocks. Haven't had one fail to be fair.
Finished height of this one I did last year was 7ft.
And last one was a restoring sections of retaining dry stone wall
I found that welding of reinforcement became decidedly risky when there was a mass dumping of Chinese "alloy" cold deformed on the market![]()
Surely if its engineer designed and you've followed spec you can pass on responsibilityHow long do you think is 'fair' to give as a guarantee for a retaining wall? 12 months, 12 years? Obviously, everyone stands by their work but what's an acceptable amount of time?
I give 12 minutes or 12 miles, whichever comes firstHow long do you think is 'fair' to give as a guarantee for a retaining wall? 12 months, 12 years? Obviously, everyone stands by their work but what's an acceptable amount of time?
Surely if its engineer designed and you've followed spec you can pass on responsibility