Walkway Path Layout Calculator
Start with the path itself: route geometry, finished area, centerline length, and open-edge length. Then carry that footprint into pavers, gravel, edging, spoil, or the full guided walkway planner.
Width changes every downstream quantity. Curve style mostly changes cut complexity, edging detail, and the waste tier that paver installs usually need.
Why route geometry comes first
Walkways look simple until the accessory counts show up. A narrow garden path can have less area than a patio, but it often has much more exposed edge, which changes edging, edge restraint, and cut waste fast.
That is why this calculator owns the route before the materials. Once you know the finished footprint, centerline length, and open-edge length, the rest of the project becomes a composition problem instead of a guessing problem.
Open-edge length vs total perimeter
Open-edge length is the portion of the path that actually needs containment. A walkway that ties into a curb, slab, or border on one side will not need edging on that tied-in side, so the open-edge takeoff can be much smaller than the full perimeter.
Keeping that number separate lets the later `edging-calculator` stay honest: it turns linear open edges into sections, coils, stakes, or edging stones without pretending to own the rest of the surface math.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this walkway layout calculator own? +
Why does open-edge length matter so much on walkways? +
Does the curved mode use exact arc geometry? +
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