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thadine_gw

How to clean very dirty patio?

thadine
15 years ago

I have a tiled outdoor patio that gets extremely dirty (I guess the wind just blows lots of dust/dirt there), but I'm not sure what the best way to clean it would be. Indoors I normally use a steam mop, or micro fibre mops, but I have found these insufficient for the outdoor area. Since they are outdoor tiles, I guess they are rougher, and probably have some kind of non-slip coating on them - at any rate, they seem to require real scrubbing to get them clean. Any recommendations on what I should do? I don't really like getting down on my hands and knees with a scrubbing brush, but that seems to be the only thing that works right now.

Comments (17)

  • arizonarose
    15 years ago

    If you have a pressure washer it would probably do a good job. We use one on our concrete and it looks like new. I don't think it would hurt the tile as we have washed our cars with it too.

  • thadine
    Original Author
    15 years ago

    Unfortunately, I can't use a pressure washer. I'm in Australia, and we have strict water restrictions - no hosing of hard surfaces whatsoever (including high pressure hosing). Good idea, though :)

  • graywings123
    15 years ago

    If you can't hose down a hard surface, how do you rinse off the soap or cleaning product from the tiles?

    Instead of getting on your hands and knees, could you use a short-bristle very stiff scrubbing brush on a pole?

  • oofasis
    15 years ago

    Last spring when our home addition/remodel was complete, we pulled up the small patio slab in our backyard and poured new concrete. We chose to hardscape the entire yard, and the result is absolutely stunning. We opted for a stained stamped concrete in a style called Roman tiles. Each "tile" is wonderfully textured and looks as though its been there for eons. Everyone oohs and aahs.

    Yeah, right. And now I have a HUGE outdoor floor to clean! Those wonderful "textures" collect a black dust in every crevice. My husband sez it bothers me but not him (but then, on weekends it would never occur to him to start cleaning the house, either!). Our property is in the midst of canyons in SoCal, and we always get tons of a fine layer of dirt/silt -- but I'll be darned if I didn't consider what that would do when we decided to texturize the new concrete.

    At first I used a long yard broom and swept the patio, but I quickly saw that I didn't have the time or energy to do that. My husband bought a combo vacuum/blower and he uses the blower every couple of weeks. Takes about 20 minutes. We had thought about a power washer, but here in SoCal we really do try to be water-wise.

  • jannie
    15 years ago

    I use a big sweeping brush on my patio. Just weekly brushing keeps it clean, it's done in natural red brick. It doesn't require any regular washing.

  • chipshot
    15 years ago

    Do you use it as a vacuum or a blower? If as a blower, where does all the dust it kicks up go?

    Is there anything that combines a rotary brush with a vacuum? That would seem to provide the necessary agitation with dirt removal.

  • arizonarose
    15 years ago

    oofasis, we are water conservative here too. I was under the impression pressure washers use alot less water then trying to wash with a garden hose...am I wrong on this?

    It does seem like if you use a blower it's all going to blow back . I think the OP was referring to dirty tiles..something that you can't blow off but have to scrub.

    We were in Mexico last week, and they have a lot of tile sidewalks which looked pretty clean to me...I bet they just let mother nature wash them when it rains.

  • thadine
    Original Author
    15 years ago

    Yes, I was talking about dirty tiles that need scrubbing - a blower wouldn't do the job at all (plus, surely the dirt would come right back and settle onto the tiles again anyway). At the moment, I scrub it, then wipe it down with a cloth that's been rinsed in clean water. Takes ages and ages - I can only do a small square of 9 tiles at a time. I was hoping someone could recommend something along the lines of a heavy duty mop.

  • graywings123
    15 years ago

    Hands and knees 9 tiles at a time - are you nuts??? There is no way I would do that much physical labor for an outdoor patio. I would settle for sweeping it and letting nature do what it does. Or maybe cover with indoor-outdoor carpeting.

  • thadine
    Original Author
    15 years ago

    Well, that's why I need a better solution...

    Covering the tiles would just trap the dirt underneath - I doubt it would be any cleaner.

  • chipshot
    15 years ago

    Not to be critical, but may we ask your motivation for wanting the patio so clean? We have a brick paver patio and never let the presence of a little dirt, some twigs, or a few leaves stop us from enjoying it. If I were in Australia, I'd be more concerned about the various spiders and other critters whose bite or sting can lead to one's demise.

  • reeny
    15 years ago

    I just bought a vapor steam machine it holds about a gallon of water and runs for about 2 hours.It has brushes that attach and are great for removing the dirt. I bought it to cleam my grout and it works beautifully.

  • Happyladi
    15 years ago

    Can you just use a vacuum on it? It wouldn't pick up the real stuck on dirt, but it would get everything a broom would with less trouble. Maybe not worry about it being a little dirty since it is outside.

  • branndisue_msn_com
    12 years ago

    my family and i are wanting to redo our backyard.Today i went out to jump on my trampoline and i noticed our patio was all dirty and had stains everywhere so i took the hose and started spraying it it looke a lot cleaner.I came back out in about 45 minutes and guess what the stains were back the patio was covered in water it was basically flooded so i tried to scoop the water out but it didnt work what should i do

  • HU-126979104
    2 years ago

    Washing with water doesn't work, unless you scrub. Water pressure would wk beautifully, however, it's too cold to wk with water every week in winter or even in summer. I find that mopping works very well and doesn't leave stains like it does with just washing with water. Blowing i faster than sweeping, before mopping. BUT...the problem is the rough surface of outdoor tile eats away the mop and I'm constantly replacing the mop. While searching for an out door mop i ended up here😄

  • Momof5x
    2 years ago

    Not sure what kind of tile you have, but a mop and bucket with a little bleach in water should do it!

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