If it runs under the concrete into the dirt it will end up washing it away, creating sink holes and destroying the concrete/people no?
No, they use one of two methods to prevent this. They either use semi-solid substrate with...
If it runs under the concrete into the dirt it will end up washing it away, creating sink holes and destroying the concrete/people no?
No, they use one of two methods to prevent this. They either use semi-solid substrate with perforated drainage tubes (I'd assume this would be for larger expanses like parking lots or an elevated roadway). Or they use packed gravel substrate that allows the water to percolate naturally back into the ground, which is almost no different than what happens on normal ground.
Posted by Guest on Tue Jul 26 02:15:09 2011
I'm going to fill my house with this shit so I can pee anywhere.
Posted by Guest on Sun Jul 24 03:57:52 2011
pervious concrete
ME GUSTA
no more stepping on random dirty water in parking lot and getting your car floor dirty.
Posted by Guest on Sat Jul 23 22:49:46 2011
So the water doesn't sit on the concrete... But where does it go then?
If it runs under the concrete into the dirt it will end up washing it away, creating sink holes and destroying the concrete/people no?
Posted by Guest on Sat Jul 23 22:43:58 2011
what has science done?
what if all pavements start feeling thirsty?
we're doomed gentlemen, doomed i tell you.
Its call pervious, or permeable concrete. This is from a demonstration video. The stuff is incredible. It wont hold water, so even if you did a whole mall parking lot out of it. There would be no ponding, no streams running everywhere, with no water on ...
Its call pervious, or permeable concrete. This is from a demonstration video. The stuff is incredible. It wont hold water, so even if you did a whole mall parking lot out of it. There would be no ponding, no streams running everywhere, with no water on the surface theres no ice either.
Recent comments
this is not good
if I spill my drink I wont be able to get it back anymore
Posted by Lord is GOD (guest) on Wed Jul 27 13:17:15 2011
If it runs under the concrete into the dirt it will end up washing it away, creating sink holes and destroying the concrete/people no?
No, they use one of two methods to prevent this. They either use semi-solid substrate with...
If it runs under the concrete into the dirt it will end up washing it away, creating sink holes and destroying the concrete/people no?
No, they use one of two methods to prevent this. They either use semi-solid substrate with perforated drainage tubes (I'd assume this would be for larger expanses like parking lots or an elevated roadway). Or they use packed gravel substrate that allows the water to percolate naturally back into the ground, which is almost no different than what happens on normal ground.
Posted by Guest on Tue Jul 26 02:15:09 2011
I'm going to fill my house with this shit so I can pee anywhere.
Posted by Guest on Sun Jul 24 03:57:52 2011
pervious concrete
ME GUSTA
no more stepping on random dirty water in parking lot and getting your car floor dirty.
Posted by Guest on Sat Jul 23 22:49:46 2011
So the water doesn't sit on the concrete... But where does it go then?
If it runs under the concrete into the dirt it will end up washing it away, creating sink holes and destroying the concrete/people no?
Posted by Guest on Sat Jul 23 22:43:58 2011
what has science done?
what if all pavements start feeling thirsty?
we're doomed gentlemen, doomed i tell you.
Posted by Guest on Sat Jul 23 05:34:14 2011
haHA! Fuck you, flooding!
Posted by Guest on Sat Jul 23 03:18:49 2011
pervious concrete
| show fullshow summaryIts call pervious, or permeable concrete. This is from a demonstration video. The stuff is incredible. It wont hold water, so even if you did a whole mall parking lot out of it. There would be no ponding, no streams running everywhere, with no water on ...
Its call pervious, or permeable concrete. This is from a demonstration video. The stuff is incredible. It wont hold water, so even if you did a whole mall parking lot out of it. There would be no ponding, no streams running everywhere, with no water on the surface theres no ice either.
Posted by j (guest) on Sat Jul 23 02:11:37 2011