We have several portions of our site that are specified to be crushed limestone. I can't find an SRI value for crushed gravel or crushed limestone. Anyone know where I can find this information?
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Tristan Roberts
RepresentativeVermont House of Representatives
LEEDuser Expert
11478 thumbs up
July 12, 2010 - 9:51 pm
I found an SRI for limestone pavers of 62 from the Natural Stone Council, but I don't know about crushed gravel, and I wasn't able to find anything online. I will keep looking around, and please post back here if you find an answer.
Peter Kennedy
LEED AP, GreenPoint RaterBright Green Strategies
72 thumbs up
September 29, 2010 - 9:02 pm
Not sure if this is specific enough, or if USGBC will buy it, but here's a report with limestone SRI: http://www.concretethinker.com/Content/Upload/446.pdf
sara frye
57 thumbs up
February 10, 2011 - 5:35 pm
I was searching for the SRI of bluestone as well. While at Build Boston 2010 I posed the question to a guy in the stone trade. He gave me an SRI of 18.2 for bluestone. Hope that helps.
Sonrisa Lucero
Owner / Energy Engineer / Sustainability ConsultantSustainnovations, LLC
138 thumbs up
September 21, 2011 - 4:23 pm
The only thing I can find is using the SRI value in SSC7.2 for a gravel ballast. In Table 1, a light gravel on a built-up roof has an SRI of 37. Also, gravel is used in making concrete, so maybe an SRI of 35 is playing it safe. Any other ideas?
Nadia Ayala
Architect / LEED AP BD+CKILTIK Consultoría
52 thumbs up
March 22, 2012 - 6:34 pm
Hi everyone,
I was just wondering if crushed gravel couldn't be considered as pervious paving and account for this credit, even though is not vegetated.
Any thoughts?
Adrienn Gelesz
LEED APABUD Engineering Ltd.
48 thumbs up
July 17, 2012 - 9:49 am
Dear Nadia,
I'm having the same thoughts. There is no continuous hard layer under the gravel, i suppose the water could just filter in. Does anyone have any experience with this?
Tristan Roberts
RepresentativeVermont House of Representatives
LEEDuser Expert
11478 thumbs up
July 17, 2012 - 10:12 am
Nadia and Adrienn, it depends on how the gravel surface is engineered to work. As I noted earlier, most gravel roadways are basically impervious. However, if this is crushed gravel over a subsurface layer designed to be infiltrated, and the gravel is not going to be compacted by vehicle traffic (or it is engineered to withstand that, then it might be considered pervious.A separate question is whether crushed gravel would really meet the intent of this credit as "open-grid paving." I have doubts about that, if you compare crushed gravel to what most open-grid paving looks like.
Jenni Betancourt
Director of Sustainability | ArchitectDewberry Architects Inc.
3 thumbs up
July 27, 2022 - 3:13 pm
According to our engineers, gravel paving is impervious.