The rosemary name is synonymous with clay plain tiles adding distinction and character to pitched roofs for over 175 years.
Rosemary roof tiles per square metre.
57 4 tiles per m.
Today a range of single and cross camber tiles combine the quality of hand crafted clay with the reliability of modern machine made techniques.
This square metre tile calculator will provide an estimate of how many tiles you will need per m 2 based on the size of your tile dimensions.
In this instance we would suggest 3 470 tiles to be sure there are enough tiles to complete your project.
Tiles per square metre.
Apply the above calculation with your requirements to work out how many roof tiles you need for any tile type.
For most pitched roofs you would use 60 rosemary tiles per square metre giving you a basic cost of 29 40 m excluding delivery.
If your roof is greater than 33 33m and you are ordering more than 2000 tiles then your cost would drop to 27 60 m.
But at an average of 11 to the square metre far fewer tiles are needed and the labour costs for fixing them are significantly reduced.
10 5 tiles per m.
3 97 x 12 6 x 2 100 04m total roof area when you know this you can work out all the materials needed to complete your project.
Today a range of single and cross camber tiles combine the quality of hand crafted clay with the reliability of modern machine made techniques.
How many roof tiles do i need.
9 7 tiles per m.
Koramic 401 flemish pantile.
To be on the safe side we recommend rounding up to the nearest ten.
Wienerberger each interlocking tile costs over twice the cost of a plain tile.
Marley hawkins single camber.
16 6 tiles per m.
57 4 tiles per m.
Coverage is 9 5 tiles per m and the cost is approximately 1 40 tile totalling 13 30 m image credit.
Koramic 301 smooth plain tile.
Once you know the square meterage of your roof the next stage is to calculate how many tiles you need.
To calculate the number of tiles required the calculator multiplies the millimetre mm width and length of one tile to ascertain its area coverage then divides 1m 2 by the result providing the amount of tiles you will need.