DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Home Repair (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/)
-   -   Driveway Floods (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/260213-driveway-floods.html)

[email protected] September 14th 08 02:00 PM

Driveway Floods
 
Need some advise with my driveway flooding when there is heavy pour of
rain. The roadside gulley blocks which causes the rain water to flow
into my driveway. My driveway slops down which means its very easy for
the water to flow in. I've installed a drain that goes across my house
and collects the water which then goes into two rain gulleys (one
which is directed to the main rain gulley on the road, the other that
is directly to the sewage) when the roadside gully is blocked the rain
gulley is blocked as well but the gulley linked to the sewage gets
blocks on top with leafs etc which stops it collecting any water. My
driveway is bricked so there is no way it can suck the water down to
the earth (bad design by myself because I put a plastic underneath).
I've got a picture showing the blockage.

I've spoken to the water company and they said the pipes are bigger
enough to take the water but due to heavy rain they can't do anything.
So the only solution I can think is to raise my driveway and also make
sure the water on the driveway can sink to the earth. I was first
think of putting a ramp which is about 15 cm high (similar to ramps
which are at schools) which would stop the water entering my property,
this would test the flood. If it worked then I could raise my driveway
so the ramp would not be obvious. What do you think?

Norminn September 14th 08 02:37 PM

Driveway Floods
 
wrote:

Need some advise with my driveway flooding when there is heavy pour of
rain. The roadside gulley blocks which causes the rain water to flow
into my driveway. My driveway slops down which means its very easy for
the water to flow in. I've installed a drain that goes across my house
and collects the water which then goes into two rain gulleys (one
which is directed to the main rain gulley on the road, the other that
is directly to the sewage) when the roadside gully is blocked the rain
gulley is blocked as well but the gulley linked to the sewage gets
blocks on top with leafs etc which stops it collecting any water. My
driveway is bricked so there is no way it can suck the water down to
the earth (bad design by myself because I put a plastic underneath).
I've got a picture showing the blockage.

I've spoken to the water company and they said the pipes are bigger
enough to take the water but due to heavy rain they can't do anything.
So the only solution I can think is to raise my driveway and also make
sure the water on the driveway can sink to the earth. I was first
think of putting a ramp which is about 15 cm high (similar to ramps
which are at schools) which would stop the water entering my property,
this would test the flood. If it worked then I could raise my driveway
so the ramp would not be obvious. What do you think?


Your driveway slopes down from the ditch along the street? Trying to
envision what you are
saying. Post the picture. The plastic under the brick, although not
the best choice, probably
has little to do with the problem. If water is standing on or in the
driveway, it can't sink through
the plastic but you need a way for it to drain off and not collect on
the driveway.

dpb September 14th 08 03:34 PM

Driveway Floods
 
wrote:
Need some advise with my driveway flooding when there is heavy pour of
rain. The roadside gulley blocks which causes the rain water to flow
into my driveway. My driveway slops down which means its very easy for
the water to flow in. ...


Had same geometry in TN on hillside.

Regrade the driveway to make a lower-than-the-garage-floor location to
prevent the water running down the drive flowing into the garage. It
needs to be able to then drain to one or both sides around the house and
have enough drop so the water doesn't run up the other side if solid.
Even better is to include a waterway across it covered w/ (removable)
grate say 6-8" wide.

Something like...

road surface

Buddy September 14th 08 09:43 PM

Driveway Floods
 
On 14 Sep, 14:37, Norminn wrote:
wrote:
Need some advise with my driveway flooding when there is heavy pour of
rain. The roadside gulley blocks which causes the rain water to flow
into my driveway. My driveway slops down which means its very easy for
the water to flow in. I've installed a drain that goes across my house
and collects the water which then goes into two rain gulleys (one
which is directed to the main rain gulley on the road, the other that
is directly to the sewage) when the roadside gully is blocked the rain
gulley is blocked as well but the gulley linked to the sewage gets
blocks on top with leafs etc which stops it collecting any water. My
driveway is bricked so there is no way it can suck the water down to
the earth (bad design by myself because I put a plastic underneath).
I've got a picture showing the blockage.


I've spoken to the water company and they said the pipes are bigger
enough to take the water but due to heavy rain they can't do anything.
So the only solution I can think is to raise my driveway and also make
sure the water on the driveway can sink to the earth. I was first
think of putting a ramp which is about 15 cm high (similar to ramps
which are at schools) which would stop the water entering my property,
this would test the flood. If it worked then I could raise my driveway
so the ramp would not be obvious. What do you think?


Your driveway slopes down from the ditch along the street? *Trying to
envision what you are
saying. *Post the picture. *The plastic under the brick, although not
the best choice, probably
has little to do with the problem. *If water is standing on or in the
driveway, it can't sink through
the plastic but you need a way for it to drain off and not collect on
the driveway.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Thanks for the reply, how do I add a picture, I am using Google
Groups to access this newsgroup.

aemeijers September 15th 08 12:33 AM

Driveway Floods
 
Buddy wrote:
On 14 Sep, 14:37, Norminn wrote:
wrote:
Need some advise with my driveway flooding when there is heavy pour of
rain. The roadside gulley blocks which causes the rain water to flow
into my driveway. My driveway slops down which means its very easy for
the water to flow in. I've installed a drain that goes across my house
and collects the water which then goes into two rain gulleys (one
which is directed to the main rain gulley on the road, the other that
is directly to the sewage) when the roadside gully is blocked the rain
gulley is blocked as well but the gulley linked to the sewage gets
blocks on top with leafs etc which stops it collecting any water. My
driveway is bricked so there is no way it can suck the water down to
the earth (bad design by myself because I put a plastic underneath).
I've got a picture showing the blockage.
I've spoken to the water company and they said the pipes are bigger
enough to take the water but due to heavy rain they can't do anything.
So the only solution I can think is to raise my driveway and also make
sure the water on the driveway can sink to the earth. I was first
think of putting a ramp which is about 15 cm high (similar to ramps
which are at schools) which would stop the water entering my property,
this would test the flood. If it worked then I could raise my driveway
so the ramp would not be obvious. What do you think?

Your driveway slopes down from the ditch along the street? Trying to
envision what you are
saying. Post the picture. The plastic under the brick, although not
the best choice, probably
has little to do with the problem. If water is standing on or in the
driveway, it can't sink through
the plastic but you need a way for it to drain off and not collect on
the driveway.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Thanks for the reply, how do I add a picture, I am using Google
Groups to access this newsgroup.

You don't add pictures to messages in this group. You post it on one of
the free photo sites, and post the link back here.

--
aem sends...

Red Green September 19th 08 03:11 AM

Driveway Floods
 
Buddy wrote in
:

On 14 Sep, 14:37, Norminn wrote:
wrote:
Need some advise with my driveway flooding when there is heavy pour
of rain. The roadside gulley blocks which causes the rain water to
flow into my driveway. My driveway slops down which means its very
easy for the water to flow in. I've installed a drain that goes
across my house and collects the water which then goes into two rain
gulleys (one which is directed to the main rain gulley on the road,
the other that is directly to the sewage) when the roadside gully is
blocked the rain gulley is blocked as well but the gulley linked to
the sewage gets blocks on top with leafs etc which stops it
collecting any water. My driveway is bricked so there is no way it
can suck the water down to the earth (bad design by myself because I
put a plastic underneath). I've got a picture showing the blockage.


I've spoken to the water company and they said the pipes are bigger
enough to take the water but due to heavy rain they can't do
anything. So the only solution I can think is to raise my driveway
and also make sure the water on the driveway can sink to the earth.
I was first think of putting a ramp which is about 15 cm high
(similar to ramps which are at schools) which would stop the water
entering my property, this would test the flood. If it worked then I
could raise my driveway so the ramp would not be obvious. What do
you think?


Your driveway slopes down from the ditch along the street? *Trying to
envision what you are
saying. *Post the picture. *The plastic under the brick, although not
the best choice, probably
has little to do with the problem. *If water is standing on or in the
driveway, it can't sink through
the plastic but you need a way for it to drain off and not collect on
the driveway.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Thanks for the reply, how do I add a picture, I am using Google
Groups to access this newsgroup.




Post the pic on http://tinypic.com. It will give you a link. Post that
link.


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:30 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter