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Patios & Hardscape·

Planning Your Paver Patio: Size, Pattern & Drainage

A paver patio changes how you use your home. It gives you a dedicated outdoor space for grilling, sitting around a fire, or just drinking coffee on a Saturday morning. In the Cedar Valley, where we get maybe four or five good months of patio weather a year, you want that space to be right from day one. That starts before the first shovel hits the ground. The planning stage is where you figure out size, layout, pattern, and drainage, and getting those decisions right makes all the difference in how the patio looks and holds up.

Start with how you actually plan to use the space. A lot of people pick a random size because it sounds good, then end up with a patio that is too small for their furniture or too big for their yard. Think about what goes on it. A dining table for six needs about 10 by 12 feet minimum. A sitting area with chairs and a fire pit needs room to walk around safely. If you grill, leave space between the cooking area and the seating. It is better to sketch your furniture layout first and build the patio around that than the other way around.

Pattern matters more than you might expect. A running bond pattern gives you a clean, simple look that works well for small spaces and walkways. Herringbone is stronger under load and works great for driveways and high-traffic areas. Basket weave feels classic and traditional. The shape of your patio also plays into this. A rectangular patio works with almost any pattern. Curved patios need smaller pavers or careful cutting to keep the lines clean. We can help you match the pattern to the shape of your space so it looks intentional rather than like an afterthought.

Drainage is the part that you do not see but you will definitely notice if it is wrong. In Iowa, freeze-thaw cycles are brutal on patios that hold water. Water seeps into the joints, freezes, expands, and lifts the pavers. That is how you end up with a wavy, uneven surface a few years in. The fix starts in the base. We excavate down 8 to 10 inches for a regular patio, lay and compact crushed aggregate in lifts, and screed a sand layer with precise slopes. The finished surface should pitch away from your house at about a quarter inch per foot. That way, rain runs off instead of pooling.

A lot of homeowners in Cedar Falls also want extras like built-in fire pits, seat walls, or outdoor kitchens integrated into the patio. Those additions need to be planned at the beginning, not tacked on after the base is done. A seat wall adds weight that needs footing. A fire pit needs a gas line or a solid foundation for stone. An outdoor kitchen needs utilities roughed in. We design those elements into the patio from the start so everything ties together cleanly.

At A1 Property Services, we have installed paver patios all over the Cedar Valley. We know the soil conditions, the drainage patterns, and the materials that hold up best here. We also know that every homeowner has a different vision for their yard. That is why we start every project with a conversation about what you want, then build a plan that fits your property and your budget.

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