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Constructing Garden Steps
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Steps
present as ideal an opportunity for beautifying the outdoors as any
other item on your landscaping agenda. Materials which can be used vary
from round-cut logs to concrete, brick or stone.
Standard step dimensions for outdoors should be the same as for indoor
steps, particularly in areas frequently used. The tread should be 10
inches deep and the risers about 7 1/2 inches.
Treads should be 1/4 inch lower in the front than they are in the back
to permit drainage. For any steps other than those made of rounds of
logs, a good foundation is essential. The foundation should extend 6
inches below the frost line.
Concrete is an often-used material for steps, although it is not always
the most attractive. A simple form can be constructed of a series of
boxes, of lx 6- or lx 8-inch scrap lumber, each box the same width but
10 inches shorter than the box for the lower step.
The boxes are placed one on top of the other, and held together by
outside lathing cleats. Corners should be well braced. Use 1 part
Portland cement to 3 parts sand and 6 parts gravel. The cement is
poured and the step tops are levelled by using the flat edge of a
board.
If you use pre-cast concrete blocks, the need for forms for step
construction is eliminated. The cost is about the same as building
steps of poured concrete, although the job—especially for a
one-man operation—is easier.
It is important to bond the blocks together well and you can obtain
good appearance by applying a thin overall coating of concrete.
Brick steps are built in the same manner as concrete blocks, although
more masonry skill is required. A layer of gravel is first laid over
the subsoil as a foundation. The weakness of brick steps is the many
joints that are required.
In constructing stone steps, the principle difficulty is finding the
stone. While this presents no problem at all in some areas, in other
areas stone must be purchased, and when this is true, stone steps are
by far the most expensive type to build. They are also among the most
attractive.
Stone steps can be built without masonry bonding, if large enough
stones can be found. The principles of dry-wall construction will
apply. If steps are freestanding, mortar must be used. The foundation
must be prepared as for brick steps.
The concrete used to make beds for the stones must be placed carefully
to keep a good pattern. Levelling must be done precisely (the string
level is recommended).
It is best to remove spilled mortar from stones while it is still wet,
because when it is dry it presents a problem. Dry mortar, however, may
be removed by using muriatic acid.
Wooden rounds cut from large logs make a beautiful and easily
constructed set of steps. The bottom round is set in the earth, and the
next one placed to partially cover it, leaving a riser. The ground is
filled in under the upper round and firmly tamped, and this procedure
is followed to the desired height.
Informal wooden steps can be used for long slopes where there is no
need for real steps but it is too steep for just a path. Ramp steps can
be made with risers of large stone flags, logs or squared timber.
The paths that lead to the steps should have the same width as the
steps. The ramps should not rise too rapidly, the largest rise being
3/4 inch per foot.
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