I'm purchasing an older estate this Friday that has a free-standing two car garage that dates back to the 1930's. At some point the owners laid asphalt for the long driveway and into the garage. The garage asphalt has never fully cured and is somewhat soft - if you park on it you leave tire marks, and if you have anything like a shelf or tool chest on it they will slowly sink into the asphalt.
The Garage is the front building. The building behind it is a larger shop that the previous owner used as a wood shop.
I've thought about two different options - I could get some quotes and hire someone to dig out the asphalt and re-pour the garage floor with cement. The main worry about this is getting someone that can get the asphalt out without damaging the garage structure or cement foundation.
The other option would be to just lay garage tile (race deck, gladiator, etc) on top of the asphalt and call it good. I think by doing this option the tiles would pretty much press into the asphalt over time and may not stay flat (but at least it wouldn't sound like you're walking on floor tiles on hard surface, because the tiles would become part of the asphalt). There have been various fluids spilled in the garage over the years that make it soft and almost flaky in some spots, but the overall condition is just soft and not-cured.
The rest of the driveway is asphalt, and it's in great shape, perfect hardness, but the garage floor is a mess.
Any suggestions for a long-time lurker, first time poster?
TIA
John
The Garage is the front building. The building behind it is a larger shop that the previous owner used as a wood shop.
I've thought about two different options - I could get some quotes and hire someone to dig out the asphalt and re-pour the garage floor with cement. The main worry about this is getting someone that can get the asphalt out without damaging the garage structure or cement foundation.
The other option would be to just lay garage tile (race deck, gladiator, etc) on top of the asphalt and call it good. I think by doing this option the tiles would pretty much press into the asphalt over time and may not stay flat (but at least it wouldn't sound like you're walking on floor tiles on hard surface, because the tiles would become part of the asphalt). There have been various fluids spilled in the garage over the years that make it soft and almost flaky in some spots, but the overall condition is just soft and not-cured.
The rest of the driveway is asphalt, and it's in great shape, perfect hardness, but the garage floor is a mess.
Any suggestions for a long-time lurker, first time poster?
TIA
John
