Heated driveway/walkway for black ice
last month
Featured Answer
Sort by:Oldest
Comments (13)
- last month
- last month
Related Discussions
Help please edging path
Comments (18)It's really difficult to answer specific micro-landscaping questions without the macro picture, and it's particularly difficult to do it when a lot of decisions have been made already that are suboptimal and now have to be worked around (my sense of you is that you won't take offense to that remark - please don't!). I've had the feeling with this thread that we've backed into discussing what your landscaping needs are, but maybe now that the big picture is starting to come into play we can make some progress. The last picture you provided finally takes things out to a frame that puts the micro stuff into some context. I'm going to in fact ignore for a moment the question you originally posted to address some of the things you've brought up in the interim in passing. For example, what should be in that foundation bed? That there is something wrong with those Microbiotas has been nagging at me but I haven't been able to put my finger on why. I think it is that, being flat, they don't actually do anything to anchor the house/connect it to the ground - if you have a flat foundation planting, you do need that height out further in the yard to frame it. Nor do they provide much visual interest for sitting on the porch. I mean, I love them, but I wouldn't want to stare at so many of them up close all summer. For that, I like plants that are alluring up close, great foliage or flowers, and changing as the days and months go by. I've also got just a patchy understanding of the planting constraints, specifically rocks/drainage in the front yard. First I thought you couldn't plant trees out there, but with the apple question it sounds like you can. If you could give us a plan view of where you can and cannot plant, that might help (and even if you only do it for yourself, that might be a tool that would help you make decisions). Somewhere on this forum, Laag has posted a list of questions to ask yourself in making a plan, I just can't recall where. And on other old threads you might see some examples of plan views in action. Reading some old discussions might even help you to pinpoint your objectives - sometimes the hardest part. The other thing that is bugging me - and I know you don't want to hear about the house here! - is that the frameless front porch is a special landscape design challenge. I understand why you have it, I think, but something about it looks unfinished. It is massively improved by just those few flowerpots in the first picture. My tentative thought is that such a porch, with a step-off look, would only look logical with a patio right below it to step off onto - not with a flowerbed. Or have you ever considered making the steps go all the way across the porch, not just the centre? I also wonder whether all that rock, which I love in theory, is too fragmented a material to use to anchor such a big house. That impression might go away when you finish the walls as planned and some macro lines emerge. In aggregate, I think that if I were to sketch a plan for your front yard based on what you've told us, I would (a) move the Microbiotas to cover the slope that you see as you drive up, so that they are seen somewhat from above and not just from the side, augmented by the boxwoods somehow, (b) put a couple of mid-size deciduous trees in the front yard, apple being a fine choice but not a maple (never be constrained by something that you have but didn't really want in the first place), hopefully you'd be able to include one that would shade your southwest corner in time, (c) make the foundation bed some sort of a walkable flagstone pathway with ground covers and perennials - assuming that in winter it's covered with snow anyway?, and (d) put something on the porch to edge it, if just those few pots. Hope that helps, and that others can fill the gaps or errors... KarinL...See MoreThe Great 2009 Ice Storm
Comments (25)An update....we are working every chance we get, weather permitting, to get the yard cleaned up. Nolon cuts out the firewood, and I drag the remaining limbs and twigs to one of the several piles around the perimeter of our yard. I keep discovering more breakage that we had missed before. It was a strange thing....many limbs split open, but did not break off. At the One Stop we talked to a couple that lives a few miles from us. He is the same age as I (She probably is too). They have lived here all their lives, but said they never saw anything like the breakage from that storm. They have a large farm, and are busy fixing fences that were downed by falled trees and limbs.(He is Nolon's barber.) I think part of the problem is that it had been unseasonably warm, and the sap was up. And talking about sap, the ends of the broken trunks on the river birch are 'bleeding' vigoriously, and have long icicles hanging down, on cold days. I way be weird, but I ate several of the sap icicles today. They have no didtinctive flavor. :-) I cleaned the debris from the base of the honey locust at the end of the house. The dafodils at it's base are getting ready to bloom! The Cornelian cherry is starting to bloom, too....See MorePaths for snowy climates... ideas? (and intro)
Comments (6)Thanks for your thoughts, everyone! My husband agrees that we should run a downspout extender pipe to a drywell in the adjacent plantings for the gutter issue, so that's that. Now, what for the path? I guess it seems like bluestone, either drylaid or mortared, is best (especially since I havea pile of it already). The thing is, I have soooo much to do this spring: I'm cutting timber steps into a pretty big hill area and laying an informal dry-laid flagstone path through the lawn in the front of the house. (Not to mention the big veg garden maintenance and landscaping around our new deck!) So I'm worried about taking on too much. Has anyone DIY-ed a mortared bluestone path? I have a large pile of salvaged bluestone and other paving stones (mostly irregular but some squared) that I will be using for the front path; may have enough for this path, too. I would assume drylaid is easier to DIY (dig 6", compact, fill with crusher run or similar, compact, lay stone, fill joints with stone dust?) than mortared, is that a correct assumption? I definitely have the skills to do mortared, it's just the time, energy, and $$! Maybe I am wrong about that though- can anyone compare cost, time, energy between the two methods? Also, I would assume that drylaid is a lot more maintenance as far as weeds and surrounding turf needing to be removed on a frequent basis. Can anyone comment on that? Landscaping on one side will be turf (snow goes there in winter); on the other side is mostly the garage, with a small, 36" stretch of planting bed....See MoreHeated Driveway Experience
Comments (31)Our average snowfall is 262”. Last year was 400+. Ws didn’t do a heated drive, BUT it wasn’t the construction cost but rather the utility cost and environmental factors that drove our decicion and the fact that our drive is relatively short (as are most in town and close to the ski area) and faces south (which is really a huge pro as far as snowmelt is concerned). Sure there are some days when snow blowing is nice but really not as often as you might think and I’ve never been able to get out of the drive after a big snow even without it. In our higher end neighborhood inly a handfull of houses have heated drives. But as David said in the Uber high end upward of 10m, heated drives are much more common, but those homes usually have more land and longer drives (also farther out from town, so while their driveways may be fine their roads must still wait for the plows.) In our small neighborhood in the recent 3.5 to 6.3 m range, I don’t see any difference in sales price in heated vs. not. However, in Worthy’s situation, that might be different. Certainly he needs heated steps to the rental and if all the houses in the neighborhood have heated drives, it might be expectec by buyers....See MoreRelated Professionals
North Chicago Architects & Building Designers · Ammon Home Builders · Arlington Home Builders · Knik-Fairview Home Builders · Cheney General Contractors · Enumclaw General Contractors · Spring Valley Architects & Building Designers · Banning General Contractors · Coos Bay General Contractors · El Sobrante General Contractors · Mililani Town General Contractors · Springfield General Contractors · University Park General Contractors · Wolf Trap General Contractors · Camas Landscape Architects & Landscape Designers- last month
- last monthlast modified: last month
- last month
- last monthlast modified: last month
- last month
- last month
- last month
- last month
- last month
- last month
Related Stories

GREAT HOME PROJECTSHow to Give Your Driveway and Front Walk More Curb Appeal
Prevent injuries and tire damage while making a great first impression by replacing or repairing front paths
Full Story
CURB APPEALHow to Reseal Your Asphalt Driveway
Protect your driveway and keep it looking great by applying new sealer every couple of years. Get the details here
Full Story
REMODELING GUIDESGravel Driveways: Crunching the Pros and Cons
If you want to play rough with your driveway, put away the pavers and choose the rocky road
Full Story
REMODELING GUIDESConcrete Driveways: Poring Over the Pros and Cons
Concrete adds smooth polish to driveways and a sleek look to home exteriors, but here are the points to ponder before you re-surface
Full Story
GREAT HOME PROJECTSWhat to Know About Installing a Walkway of Pavers and Pebbles
Find out how to get started, whom to hire, materials to use and costs to expect when adding a path of pavers and gravel
Full Story
FLOORSIs Radiant Heating or Cooling Right for You?
Questions to ask before you go for one of these temperature systems in your floors or walls (yes, walls)
Full Story
BATHROOM DESIGNWarm Up Your Bathroom With Heated Floors
If your bathroom floor is leaving you cold, try warming up to an electric heating system
Full Story
CURB APPEALDriveways With Contemporary Curb Appeal
Get creative with plantable pavers, stone slabs, geometric concrete patterns and less traditional paving materials
Full Story
LANDSCAPE DESIGNGet a Knack for Black in the Garden
Dark walls, furniture and foliage do more than add drama in the landscape; they can be strategic design elements
Full Story
MATERIALSPrecast Concrete Pavers Make a Versatile Surface in the Garden
You can use concrete pavers in a variety of shapes and colors for your patio, walkway, driveway and more
Full Story
Maureen