Hobby_Man22
Well-known member
Every culvert I see is just wide enough to fit a compact car. Why do they make them so narrow? You have to pull a few tricks if you want to pull a trailer onto the culvert.
People are cheap? Mine's about 20 feet wide.
I had no choice in width as our zoning dept determines culverts by size of garage. 26' wide for 80' flaring out to 34' at the garage.
Many highways are narrower than my driveway.

People cheap out on the dumbest ****...
Every culvert I see is just wide enough to fit a compact car. Why do they make them so narrow? You have to pull a few tricks if you want to pull a trailer onto the culvert.
They clipped half the trees, & dented their cars, but mostly they backed over the buried cable pedestal near the end of the drive...
I had satellite at the time so I didn't care......
Delivery people hate them. Gives the owner a chance to say GET OFF MY LAWN.
You can extend culverts down the road.
I drive trucks and pull trailers and ask customers if there is turn around room. You would be amazed at the answers and descriptions of what others have had to do to get into their location. I like to know that before I bid a job. If you want to cheap out and make it as difficult as possible for trades people to access your place that is your choice, don't be surprised if you find out later all your bids were higher than someone else.
. My favorite are the city folk moving out to the country and buy that special mountain property during the summer. Finding out how expensive it is to cut in a road only go for a 8' road winding through the trees. All shaded and beautiful during the summer on that 4% grade they plan to plow with a 4 wheeler even though they have know place to push the snow. Brilliant. The first 20" snow storm and nobody wants to chain up every day to get in and out of the luge track they created. It's amazing how much longer a snow packed drive will hold ice into the summer in the shade of the trees.
Pay me now or pay me later.
. My favorite are the city folk moving out to the country and buy that special mountain property during the summer. Finding out how expensive it is to cut in a road only go for a 8' road winding through the trees. All shaded and beautiful during the summer on that 4% grade they plan to plow with a 4 wheeler even though they have know place to push the snow. Brilliant. The first 20" snow storm and nobody wants to chain up every day to get in and out of the luge track they created. It's amazing how much longer a snow packed drive will hold ice into the summer in the shade of the trees.
Pay me now or pay me later.
Most people don't have giant trucks or big trailers, so it's not an issue for them.

I have a 900' long driveway. I don't have an extra $100k to make it 16' wide and it would be money wasted for a pile of gravel that just sits there all day getting under-utilized. Instead I made the driveway 8' wide and I bought a $20k tractor with a snowblower. The entire driveway can be cleared in 30 minutes. But hey, you are free to piss away your money however you see fit.
A nice T-shaped pad at the end makes turning around anything but a 40ft. tractor trailer easy. And I really don't want a 80,000 truck on my driveway tearing it up anyway.
But maybe that’s because I’m just a big guy (6’3”) and hate being crowded in normal-sized spaces.
always going to be that one guy who gets offended, and somehow thinks everyone else cares how he justifies it, and his decisions. If the shoe fits, i suppose.
No one said everyone with a 900’ driveway should make theirs, extra wide. We were specifically talking about shorter driveways, where the additional cost would be nominal. But thanks for telling us you have a driveway that’s nearly the length of a dragstrip. We all look up to you now. Go on... Type your lengthy and witty reply, because we know you’ll feel the need to put us in our place.
a tunnel carrying a stream or open drain under a road or railroad.
I have a 900' long driveway. I don't have an extra $100k to make it 16' wide and it would be money wasted for a pile of gravel that just sits there all day getting under-utilized. Instead I made the driveway 8' wide and I bought a $20k tractor with a snowblower. The entire driveway can be cleared in 30 minutes. But hey, you are free to piss away your money however you see fit.
A nice T-shaped pad at the end makes turning around anything but a 40ft. tractor trailer easy. And I really don't want a 80,000 truck on my driveway tearing it up anyway.
How sad. I don't see how an extra wide culvert would ever cost you more in the long run. It would surely add to the property value.
I also will say people never plan on a truck coming down their driveway!
As a truckdriver I always think about what if I ever need a truck to come through whenever I make gates ,driveways.
My Dad taught me about false economy a long time ago. 45 years ago we built a shop building and he was told that 4 inches of concrete would be fine so he asked for 8 inches.
I installed a 2 post lift 25 years later with confidence and it has held up with all our abuse.
The year after it was built he bought a trailer wider than the doors he "settled" on installing. He told me to get what you want or you end up with what you don't want. His other lesson on this was that he was going to go make some more money tomorrow, but those door will piss him off forever!
I had no choice in width as our zoning dept determines culverts by size of garage. 26' wide for 80' flaring out to 34' at the garage.
Many highways are narrower than my driveway.
People cheap out on the dumbest ****.
Local, young couple, hard working, good people. Bought a great lot a few years ago, did a ton of excavating, waited a couple years and built a great house, nice landscaping, etc. Waited another year or so and finally graded all the gravel, and added concrete to their driveway. I drive by there to check it out and low and behold... their damn concrete is barely seven feet wide. All the way from the garage door, to the street... about a hundred feet or so. No margin of error... and no shoulder space for clearing snow without some lawn damage. Yes, it costs a little more initially, but to go larger is just a small percentage more, while all the trouble of grading, forming, pouring, and finishing is already out on the table. To each their own, I suppose.
I know, I know. I get it, there’s a lot of costs in buying property, and building a home. But some things just aren’t worth going cheap. When I built my two-car garage, I built it eight feet wider than most two-car garages, and I also poured the driveway wider, so there’d be plenty of space on the edges, to clear snow in the winter, to allow plenty of “walk-around” space with all the doors open on both vehicles, etc. Did the same thing on all my sidewalks, I poured all of them four feet wide. Two people can pass without stepping off into wet grass, snow, etc. But maybe that’s because I’m just a big guy (6’3”) and hate being crowded in normal-sized spaces.
Always going to be that one guy who gets offended, and somehow thinks everyone else cares how he justifies it, and his decisions. If the shoe fits, I suppose.
No one said everyone with a 900’ driveway should make theirs, extra wide. We were specifically talking about shorter driveways, where the additional cost would be nominal. But thanks for telling us you have a driveway that’s nearly the length of a dragstrip. We all look up to you now. Go on... type your lengthy and witty reply, because we know you’ll feel the need to put us in our place.
I had no choice in width as our zoning dept determines culverts by size of garage. 26' wide for 80' flaring out to 34' at the garage.
Many highways are narrower than my driveway.
Not Sure?
But this sounds "F'ed" up!
