Serving Our Customers With 16 Full Service Lumber Yards
  • Contact us Today Contact Us
  • Email us Today Our Locations
Arrow Building Center
Skip Navigation

Site Navigation

  • Home
  • About
    • About
    • Locations
    • Arrow Apparel
    • Events
    • Privacy Policy
    • Careers
    • Blog
    • Contact
    • Testimonials
  • Request A Quote
  • Services
  • Product Catalogs
    • Product Catalogs
    • Building Products Catalog
    • Hardlines Product Catalog
  • Contractor Directory
  • Bill Pay
  • CREDIT APP
    • CREDIT APP
    • Business Credit App
    • Consumer Credit App
  • LBM Connect

Bulletin Board

Just a friendly reminder that these will be our upcoming hours for the holiday season:

Hours will vary by location on Wednesday, December 24th, Christmas Eve, so please reach out to your local store for details before visiting.

Christmas Day: Closed

New Year's Eve: Open Normal Hours

scroll to top of page

Categories

Building Material

Tools and Hardware

Paint and Supplies

Lawn and Garden

New Construction

Remodeler

Exteriors

Concrete

Post Frame

Handyman

Roofing

Deck Contractor

Fire/Water Damage Restoration

Cabinets

Excavation

Contractor

All in Contractor
Technology
Business
Kitchen & Bath
Interior
Outdoor

DIY / Homeowner

All in DIY / Homeowner
Paint
Tools & Hardware
Decking
Kitchen & Bath
Flooring
Outdoor
Estimating Shortcuts for Circular Concrete Shapes

Estimating Shortcuts for Circular Concrete Shapes

Article Author Sal Alfano

There’s more than one way to calculate quantities for curved slabs and tube forms. We review the standard math, add a shortcut, and throw in a cheat sheet for good measure.

Share "Estimating Shortcuts for Circular Concrete Shapes"
  • Share this:
  • Share on Facebook
  • Pin on Pinterest
  • Tweet on Twitter

When it comes to estimating concrete quantities, most remodelers rely on a quote from a subcontractor. But occasionally it’s easier to estimate the costs yourself for a small job, such as a patio slab or a group of concrete piers to support a deck. Both of those examples involve calculating volume of concrete needed, which is simple enough for a rectangular slab, but a bit more complicated for a cylindrical tube form or a semi-circular patio.

These days, you can key a few numbers into an online calculator that will spit out the quantity of concrete needed. But the math behind the calculation is easy, and it won’t hurt to be reminded how to make the calculation manually just in case your WiFi is on the blink. Plus, I just discovered a cool shortcut that’s worth knowing.

Volume of a Cylinder: #TheHardWay

figuring out shape size

A tube form is a tall, skinny cylinder, and a circular slab is a short, wide cylinder. As with all cylinders, calculating volume (V) requires multiplying the area of a circle (πr2) by the height (h). Let’s look first at a 10-inch tube form that’s 6 feet tall. To find the volume, you must: 1) find the radius; 2) convert inches to feet; and 3) plug the results into the formula V = πr2 x h [1].

The Shortcut

Okay, that was fun, but it’s a lot easier to consult a table of common tube form diameters and the amount of concrete needed to fill them per foot of height [2].

Estimating Shortcuts for Circular Concrete Shapes

That said, the actual math comes in handy when the cylinder is a patio slab. And it’s a little easier due to a shortcut I discovered while watching a video at our sister website, ProTradeCraft.com, that features Tim Odell of Odell Complete Concrete, a concrete contractor serving Orange County, Calif.

Of the many instructional videos available at the company’s website and YouTube channel, this one is about calculating the amount of concrete needed for a curved patio slab. In it, Odell reveals a shortcut that I’d never seen before: The area of a circle is 78.5% the area of a square of the same dimension. Let’s look at an example.

Estimating Shortcuts for Circular Concrete Shapes

Odell refers to drawings of a pie-shaped patio slab that projects 18 feet out from the house. The slab is a perfect quarter circle and, using his shortcut, he finds the area by taking a square of the same size, then multiplying by 0.785 to find the area of the pie shape [3]. All that’s left to get the volume is to multiply by the thickness of the slab, which in this case is 4 inches. To actually order the concrete, of course, you have to convert to cubic yards.

Shortcutting the Tube

Coming full circle, as it were, this little trick also works with concrete tube forms. Returning to the earlier example of a 10-inch-diameter tube form, the area of a 10-inch square is 100 square inches (10 x 10) or 0.69 square feet (100/144). Multiply that by 0.785, and you get 0.545 square feet for the area of the 10-inch circle formed by the tube. The volume of a 6-foot-tall tube is still 3.3 cubic feet (0.545 x 6).

Pretty slick.

  • This article was originally posted on Pro Remodeler
  • To view this article in its original form, Click Here!
  • Sign Up For Our Email List

    Sign up to receive exclusive special offers and news updates about our store.

    Interests

    Interests
    View our Email Archive
    Skip Navigation

    Products

    • Building Products
    • Lumber & Panels
    • Decking & Railing
    • Hardware & Tools
    Skip Navigation

    About

    • About Us
    • Testimonials
    • Locations
    • Events
    Skip Navigation

    Support

    • FAQ
    • Careers
    • Contact
    • Accessability
    • Terms of Use
    • Terms & Conditions of Sales
    • Privacy Notice
    • Do Not Sell My Info

    © 2025 Arrow Building Center. All rights reserved.

    View our accessibility statement

    Driven by New Media Retailer

    Social Media Links

    • facebook
    • twitter
    • instagram