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3 Tips To Help You Keep Your Concrete Driveway Long-Lasting And Well-Maintained

Your home's concrete driveway adds a great deal of value and aesthetic appeal to your home, so it is important to keep it well maintained and looking nice. To help keep your driveway lasting as long as 30 years, here are three tasks you can do to your driveway to keep it free of vegetation, in good repair, and clean. Remove Weed Growth As your concrete driveway ages, heavy vehicles and freeze-thaw cycles in northern climates can cause your concrete to crack.

Dealing With Reinforced Concrete Slabs

Although concrete is a relatively strong material in its own right, its low tensile strength means that it often benefits from reinforcement. Adding a framework of reinforcement bars (or rebar, for short) in a concrete structure can help it last for a long time. Unfortunately, this can add a slight wrinkle to your demolition plans, since you'll have to figure out how to quickly and efficiently break down the rebar along with the concrete.

Pros & Cons of Various Horse Stall Flooring Choices

If you are building new horse stalls or thinking of re-flooring some existing ones, you have several options when it comes to flooring. You should choose your ideal stall flooring material based on ease of installation, drainage ability, and comfort for your horse. Here's a look at three common stall flooring options, and the advantages and disadvantages of each one. Concrete Concrete floors are rather common in horse barns, and if you're at all handy, you can probably pour a concrete stall floor yourself with ready-mix concrete or simply hire a professional.

Laying Your New Home's Foundation: How To Avoid Disastrous Structural Mistakes

Pouring the foundation is a huge step in just about any construction project. Without a solid, level foundation, nothing else can be built. Before you unload the concrete pump truckonto your chosen plot, use these tips to prevent risky mistakes.  Stick To The Plan When you first decided to start building your own home, you had plans drawn up and approved by your local municipal government. Even if you didn't include exact measurements on the plans themselves, your city's planning agency will still expect you to build exactly what you told them you would -- no more, no less.