OT: Patio Building | The Boneyard

OT: Patio Building

Joined
Aug 27, 2011
Messages
18,073
Reaction Score
31,021
My mason who did brick and stone work passed away recently in a tragic accident and my son in law wants to put in a patio with a basketball hoop. He doesn’t want to concrete or pave so a 20 by 24 area needs to be dug out and filled and compacted with crushed stone, followed by pavers I guess. I’m looking for someone who does a great job but not be crazy expensive(tough I know). Farmington area reccomendation appreciated.
 
My mason who did brick and stone work passed away recently in a tragic accident and my son in law wants to put in a patio with a basketball hoop. He doesn’t want to concrete or pave so a 20 by 24 area needs to be dug out and filled and compacted with crushed stone, followed by pavers I guess. I’m looking for someone who does a great job but not be crazy expensive(tough I know). Farmington area reccomendation appreciated.
Not sure about pavers for a court. Asphalt too aesthetically unpleasing?
 
Having installed hundreds of bball hoops and been in that industry for 10 years I do not recommend pavers for a court. Pavement or concrete

Edit: what kind of hoop? I can recommend good brand I would personally use over others
 
Last edited:
Having installed hundreds of bball hoops and been in that industry for 10 years I do not recommend pavers for a court. Pavement or concrete

Edit: what kind of hoop? I can recommend good brand I would personally use over others
What brand?
 
I have to agree that pavers would be a recipe for disaster. Upheave would lead to unevenness and wild dribbles. How about imprinted concrete? It would be a monolithic pour and be more aesthetically pleasing than plain concrete.
 
Unfortunately their driveway is a hill which is no good and worry that if the backyard is paved it could inhibit resale where a patio paver area can be used as a firepit spot.
 
any kind of stamped concrete or pavers sounds like a blown knee
 
Unfortunately their driveway is a hill which is no good and worry that if the backyard is paved it could inhibit resale where a patio paver area can be used as a firepit spot.

I would think a 20'x24' could be resodded relatively quickly if need be for re-sale.

I agree that pavers seem bad for dribbling and for rolling ankles.
 
With a 20×24 area you won't have enough room for a 3 point line. College is 20' 9" measured from the center of the rim. Hoops typically have a 4' overhang and the center of rim is 15" from the backboard.

You will barely have enough space for a legitimate free throw line (4' overhang + 15' from backboard for free throw line = 19')

20×24 is a very small area. A regulation court is 94' x 50'. Obviously most don't have regulation size but even a 1/2 court you would want something closer to 40' wide not 24'

Sounds like your son wants a hoop/ court where he might not have the room or doesn't know the size actually needed
 
I strongly recommend the Patoni pavers. Special kilns are used to increase durability. They may be a bit more pricey and difficult to replace, but Patoni does great work.
 
I made a 20x10 floating deck just I, and my 70 year old father over the course of 3 days for about $900 last summer. Looks great
 
Will look into it. Should be on concrete ideally.

Says it can be put on a crushed gravel base. There are also rubber tiles they use for courts that are cheaper. Either will work better than pavers
 
Says it can be put on a crushed gravel base. There are also rubber tiles they use for courts that are cheaper. Either will work better than pavers
If the crushed stone was compacted and at least 8 inches deep it should work.
 

Online statistics

Members online
217
Guests online
2,277
Total visitors
2,494

Forum statistics

Threads
164,113
Messages
4,382,622
Members
10,185
Latest member
aacgoast


.
..
Top Bottom