New Patio - Limestone, Yorkstone, or Westminster cast
New Patio - Limestone, Yorkstone, or Westminster cast
Author
Discussion

Lonoxe

Original Poster:

199 posts

48 months

Monday 10th March
quotequote all
I’m about to refresh our garden and have decided on roughly 160sqm of patio. Considering limestone, york stone or the Westminster cast. Would appreciate people’s experience with any of them.

Cost wise - yorkstone is most expensive, with the other 2 roughly the same price points

Supplier:
Yorkstone - Specialised yorkstone supplies Ltd
Limestone - Quorn stones
Westimistet stones

Installation - I have no idea but if I’m supplying the stone, I’m thinking between £100 - £150 for labour and materials. I have about 4 manholes to work around


Edited by Lonoxe on Monday 10th March 12:57

Chrisgr31

14,057 posts

271 months

Monday 10th March
quotequote all
160 sq m is very big. I thought mine was big at 60 sq m

Simpo Two

89,226 posts

281 months

Monday 10th March
quotequote all
Yorkstone is the proper stuff IMHO.

Another option for your list is Indian Sandstone.

Try to visit a good building supplies place where they have demo patios laid out.

jules_s

4,801 posts

249 months

Monday 10th March
quotequote all
Ah yes Indian rainbow sandstone - looks great great when it’s clean etc



I just wasted £50 on patio magic on that (bloody BBC weather forecast)

Still love it though…

PhilboSE

5,275 posts

242 months

Monday 10th March
quotequote all
York stone is very hard, but the proper stuff is very pricey these days. The real stuff comes in random dimensions and thicknesses, so it’s a bit harder to lay.

Limestone and sandstone are similarly priced for regularised slabs, relatively easy to lay.

All of them need looking after to keep green mould and black spot off, but sandstone is the most porous so needs more frequent treatment. York stone stays looking good for longer, and limestone in between.

15% sodium hypochlorite is your friend to bring the slabs back to prime condition.

Lonoxe

Original Poster:

199 posts

48 months

Tuesday 11th March
quotequote all
Thanks all. I’ve seen sawn yorkstone that’s calibrated to a consistent 50mm thickness and 600mm length with a varying width of mostly 900mm and some 400mm, 600mm. That should be easier to lay. Any opinion on laying cost?

I should add that whilst yorkstone is 50mm thick, I have struggled to find any other stone thicker than 30mm

CrgT16

2,309 posts

124 months

Tuesday 11th March
quotequote all
Yorkstone for me, we ordered it directly from the quarry, in our case it was buff and 6 side sawn 50mm thick random lengths as we wanted a smooth finish. Your labour estimates are about right if you supply the stone but depends where you live.

If you want rustic look from york stone look at reclaimed ones.

Lonoxe

Original Poster:

199 posts

48 months

Tuesday 11th March
quotequote all
CrgT16 said:
Yorkstone for me, we ordered it directly from the quarry, in our case it was buff and 6 side sawn 50mm thick random lengths as we wanted a smooth finish. Your labour estimates are about right if you supply the stone but depends where you live.

If you want rustic look from york stone look at reclaimed ones.
May I ask what quarry you used please?

m3jappa

6,752 posts

234 months

Tuesday 11th March
quotequote all
For me as a paver yorkstone is the pinnacle.

It's really hard to say how much would it be per m2 to install as so many variables involved. It's not going to be that quick because those slabs are heavy, also the thickness means cuts take longer too.

There are several much cheaper 20mm limestones about, some look amazing but before choosing I would go and gets some samples and see how absorbent they are, all stone will be but some limestone will be very soft.

Where are you based? I might be able to recommend depending on area.

ChocolateFrog

32,184 posts

189 months

Tuesday 11th March
quotequote all
Personally having laid a few patios now I'd go for porcelain, house style dependent.

Yorkstone is obviously very nice but the last time I looked decent reclaimed stuff was over £150sqm and that was atleast 5 years ago. Handling stones that can be over 10cm thick takes some doing too.

Sandstone needs laying carefully. They're surprisingly fragile and if not laid on a full even bed they'll crack. Loads cheaper though.

Byker28i

76,103 posts

233 months

Tuesday 11th March
quotequote all
We looked at various sandstones, including a Jerusalam one, that for the price you'd think Jesus walked on it...

In the end we went porcelein, big slabs. Easy to clean, attractive, slip resistant, but you could be looking at £30-60 per square metre

DoubleSix

12,288 posts

192 months

Tuesday 11th March
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Porcelain all day long.

Lonoxe

Original Poster:

199 posts

48 months

Tuesday 11th March
quotequote all
Thanks all. Porcelain is out of the question as the house is early 1800s and listed so something more natural would be better I think.

M3Jappa - I dropped you a PM. Cheers

UTH

10,738 posts

194 months

Tuesday 11th March
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Currently doing about 150m sq patio renovation as we speak:

Started like this



Currently like this



Ended up going with porcelain, about £7k in slabs alone

DoubleSix

12,288 posts

192 months

Tuesday 11th March
quotequote all
Lonoxe said:
Thanks all. Porcelain is out of the question as the house is early 1800s and listed so something more natural would be better I think.

M3Jappa - I dropped you a PM. Cheers
Porcelain can mimic any stone you wish without the drawbacks of porosity. Tumbled edges, stratification etc.

If you source a quality material you’re avoiding a lifetime of maintenance.

carinatauk

1,505 posts

268 months

Tuesday 11th March
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Might be good to read this link re costs, I think your expectations on materials and labour may be a little low:

https://www.reddit.com/r/DIYUK/comments/1c4k0qk/iv...

Byker28i

76,103 posts

233 months

Tuesday 11th March
quotequote all
UTH said:
Currently doing about 150m sq patio renovation as we speak:

Started like this



Currently like this



Ended up going with porcelain, about £7k in slabs alone
Yes, we had similar tiles, about 7 deep and 6 wide, around £1k for the tiles

netherfield

2,899 posts

200 months

Tuesday 11th March
quotequote all