Budget Busters
Your guide to a highly personalized patio.
YOU’VE SEEN IT ALL: sunken foundations, widening cracks, trapped rain runoff, and don’t forget the family of spiders that moved in under the rusting bistro table. A worn-out patio is haunted instead of hallowed, but you know that it can be so much more.
If you play your budget right, the equivalent of another living room is just outside the back door. You can sip your coffee and watch the sun rise, read the afternoon away on the chaise lounge and tell stories around a late-night fire.
FOUNDATIONAL
The first step toward that dream is to establish project scope: Does your patio need a repair or a renovation? Home Advisor says that the national average for basic patio or walkway repairs is $1,318, while the national average installation costs $3,264.
If the patio’s flaws are more aesthetic than structural, congratulations! A surprising amount of damage can be repaired, from concrete cracks to loose or missing pavers. You can resurface unsightly concrete and even use slabjacking to level a sunken patio. A permit is usually not required for basic repairs, but you’ll want to consult with a professional before taking on any large projects.
BEGIN ANEW
If foundational flaws lie between you and the patio of your dreams, get ready to start fresh. Home Advisor’s $3,264 average does not consider every financial factor that will affect your project. To estimate what your patio will cost, consider every step of the process. That way you’ll know where to splurge, when to buy secondhand and when to tackle some DIY.
Key considerations start with building permits, demolition and removal. You’ll also need to choose every element that will affect foundation installation: a gas line for a fire pit, electricity for lighting, footings for shade structures and even landscaping. Then there are materials, installation, cleanup, landscape, furniture and any other features that will make your new patio special.
Sounds like a lot, right? It’s worth considering every detail before you start, to ensure you’re not skipping steps or missing options. To avoid decision fatigue, start choosing materials well before you’re hit by mid-project stress. Planning ahead gives you plenty of wiggle room in both budget and timeline. With luck, you can have everything ready for the first barbecue of the summer.
RECLAIM HISTORY
If you own a Midcentury Modern home, your heart might sink at the thought of tearing out all that history, but not everything has to go. Old materials can have plenty of new life. Loose bricks are easily set aside to use in your new patio, and even installed bricks can be salvaged long before you bring in the jackhammers.
The SFGate’s Home Guides gives the details: You carefully chip the bricks apart with a cold chisel and 2-pound sledgehammer, row by row, and use a brick hammer to remove the rest of the mortar. If the mortar is stuck, it’s time for—you guessed it—a hydrochloric acid bath, using 1 part acid to 20 parts water.
The process requires plenty of safety measures, so please research and prep thoroughly. But reclaiming your home’s history is always worth the work.