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Drainage Slopes in Concrete Pavements – Guide 2026 | ConcreteMetric
Concrete Pavement Design Guide 2026

Drainage Slopes in Concrete Pavements – Guide

Complete guide to designing correct drainage falls in concrete pavements — driveways, car parks, footpaths, and industrial floors in Australia 2026

Everything you need to know about drainage slopes in concrete pavements — minimum cross-falls, longitudinal grades, crowned and cambered profiles, ponding prevention, channel and kerb drainage, AS 3727 and NCC requirements, and how to set out correct falls in formwork for residential and commercial projects in 2026.

Minimum Cross-Falls
Longitudinal Grades
Car Park & Driveway Falls
AS 3727 & NCC 2026

💧 Drainage Slopes in Concrete Pavements

Complete drainage fall design reference for residential driveways, car parks, footpaths, and industrial slabs — AS 3727, AS 3600, and NCC 2026

✔ Why Drainage Falls Are Critical

Drainage slope design is one of the most frequently overlooked elements of concrete pavement construction — and one of the most consequential. A concrete pavement without adequate drainage falls ponds water on its surface, accelerating surface deterioration through freeze-thaw cycling, alkali-silica reaction, efflorescence and surface scaling; creating slip hazards for pedestrians and vehicle occupants; promoting biological growth (algae, moss); and in garage or workshop floors, allowing water, oil, and chemical contamination to spread across the full slab area rather than draining to a collection point. Correct surface drainage also protects the subbase and subgrade beneath the pavement — surface water that does not drain away eventually infiltrates at joints and cracks, softening the subgrade and accelerating structural deterioration. Getting falls right at the formwork set-out stage is far less expensive than grinding, overlaying, or replacing a pavement that does not drain.

✔ Governing Standards in 2026

Drainage fall requirements for concrete pavements in Australia in 2026 are specified in several standards, depending on the pavement type and application. AS 3727:1993 (Guide to Residential Pavements) provides fall recommendations for residential driveways, paths, and slabs. The NCC 2026 Volume Two (Part 3.1) sets minimum requirements for site drainage adjacent to residential structures. AS 2890.1:2004 (Parking Facilities — Off-Street Car Parking) specifies drainage fall requirements for commercial car parks. For industrial floors, TR34 (Concrete Industrial Ground Floors — UK) and AS 3600 provide design guidance on surface tolerances and drainage. Local council requirements and stormwater management plans also govern drainage from pavement surfaces — always check with the relevant authority before finalising drainage fall design on commercial projects.

✔ What This Guide Covers

This guide provides a complete practical reference for drainage slope design in concrete pavements — covering the minimum cross-fall and longitudinal grade requirements for residential driveways, footpaths, garage floors, car parks, and industrial floors; the definitions of cross-fall, longitudinal grade, camber, crown, and catchment drainage; how to correctly set out falls in formwork using screed rails, string lines, and laser levels; the maximum grades for pedestrian safety and vehicle manoeuvring; the interaction between longitudinal and cross-fall grades (composite grade); drainage collection system selection (kerbs, channels, strip drains, pit drains); and the most common drainage design errors made on residential and commercial concrete projects in 2026.

Drainage Fall Definitions — Cross-Fall, Longitudinal Grade, and Camber

Before specifying or measuring drainage falls in a concrete pavement, it is essential to understand the terminology precisely. Different fall directions serve different drainage purposes, and the total effective drainage gradient at any point on a pavement is the vector resultant of the cross-fall and longitudinal grade acting simultaneously — known as the composite grade. Understanding how these components interact allows the designer to confirm that water will flow toward the intended collection point under all areas of the pavement, not just in the direction of the dominant fall.

💧 Concrete Pavement Drainage — Falls Reference by Pavement Type

CROSS-FALL Residential Driveway — Min. Cross-Fall
1:50 to 1:100 (1–2%) — falls transversely across driveway width to kerb or edge drain
LONG. GRADE Residential Driveway — Longitudinal Grade
Min. 1:100 (1%); max 1:5 (20%) for standard vehicles; max 1:4 (25%) with engineering
★ GARAGE ★ Garage Slab / Internal Floor — Surface Fall ★
Min. 1:100 (1%) to door threshold, channel drain, or floor pit — mandatory on all garage slabs
FOOTPATH Pedestrian Footpath — Cross-Fall
Min. 1:100 (1%); max 1:40 (2.5%) for DDA compliance; typical 1:60 to 1:80 (1.25–1.67%)
CAR PARK Car Park — Cross-Fall / Bay Drainage
Min. 1:100 (1%); max 1:20 (5%) per AS 2890.1; typical 1:50 to 1:67 (1.5–2%) for bays
CAR PARK Car Park — Aisle / Ramp Grades
Max 1:6.67 (15%) for ramps per AS 2890.1; max 1:20 (5%) for drive aisles; min 1:100 longitudinal
INDUSTRIAL Industrial Floor Slab — Drainage Gradient
Min. 1:200 (0.5%) to 1:100 (1%) to channel or pit drain; flatter on very smooth power-floated surfaces
POOL DECK Pool Deck / Wet Area Pavement
Min. 1:80 (1.25%) away from pool edge; max 1:33 (3%) for barefoot safety; drain every 6m
1:100 Absolute Minimum
Fall (Most Surfaces)
1:50 Recommended
Typical Fall
1:40 Max Cross-Fall
(DDA Footpaths)
1:20 Max Car Park
Cross-Fall (AS 2890)
1:5 Max Driveway
Longitudinal Grade
1:6.67 Max Car Park
Ramp Grade

The orange highlighted row (garage slab) represents the most critical drainage fall in residential construction — a 1:100 (1%) minimum surface fall is non-negotiable for all garage slabs. Falls must be established in the formwork set-out using screed rails and laser level — they cannot be corrected after the concrete is placed.

📐 Drainage Slopes in Concrete Pavements — Key Parameters Reference 2026

Cross-Fall Definition: Slope perpendicular to direction of travel / pavement length axis
Longitudinal Grade: Slope parallel to direction of travel / pavement length axis
Composite Grade: √(cross-fall² + long.grade²) — effective drainage direction resultant
Min. Fall (most pavements): 1:100 (1.0%) — absolute minimum for reliable drainage
Recommended Residential: 1:60 to 1:50 (1.67–2.0%) — accounts for construction tolerance
Max Cross-Fall (DDA footpath): 1:40 (2.5%) — per AS 1428.1 disability access requirements
Max Longitudinal Grade (DDA): 1:20 (5%) general; 1:14 (7%) with handrail; 1:8 (12.5%) ramp
Max Residential Driveway Grade: 1:5 (20%) standard; 1:4 (25%) with engineering approval
Min. Car Park Cross-Fall: 1:100 (1%) per AS 2890.1; typically 1:50 (2%) recommended
Max Car Park Aisle Grade: 1:20 (5%) per AS 2890.1
Max Car Park Ramp Grade: 1:6.67 (15%) per AS 2890.1; max 1:5 (20%) with warning
Construction Tolerance (AS 3727): ±6mm over 3m straightedge; falls must accommodate tolerance
Slope Expression Conversion: 1% = 1:100 = 10mm/m; 2% = 1:50 = 20mm/m; 0.5% = 1:200 = 5mm/m

Understanding Slope Notation — Ratios, Percentages, and mm/m

Drainage falls in concrete pavements are expressed in three equivalent notations that are used interchangeably across different standards and trades — and confusion between them is a common source of construction errors. A ratio notation of 1:100 means the pavement drops 1mm vertically for every 100mm of horizontal run. A percentage notation of 1% means the same thing — a 1mm drop per 100mm run, or 10mm drop per 1,000mm (1 metre) run. A mm/m notation of 10mm/m again means 10mm of fall per metre of run. All three expressions are identical: 1:100 = 1% = 10mm/m. The most practically useful notation for setting out formwork on site is mm/m — it directly gives the fall to set on a 1m or 2m spirit level when checking screed rails, and scales simply to any pavement dimension.

Composite Grade Calculation

When a pavement slopes in both the cross-fall and longitudinal directions simultaneously — as most real pavements do — the effective drainage direction is neither purely across nor purely along the pavement, but diagonally toward the lowest corner. The composite grade (the actual steepest gradient across the pavement surface, in the direction water will flow) is calculated as the square root of the sum of the squares of the two component gradients. For a pavement with a 2% cross-fall and a 1.5% longitudinal grade: composite grade = √(2² + 1.5²) = √(4 + 2.25) = √6.25 = 2.5%. This composite gradient is the value relevant to assessing pedestrian slip risk and vehicle manoeuvring difficulty — it must be checked against maximum grade limits even if the individual components both comply.

💡 Slope Conversion — Quick Reference

0.5% = 1:200 = 5mm/m — industrial floor minimum, marginal for reliable drainage on rough surfaces
1.0% = 1:100 = 10mm/m — absolute minimum for reliable drainage on smooth power-floated surfaces
1.5% = 1:67 = 15mm/m — good practice minimum for exposed outdoor pavements
2.0% = 1:50 = 20mm/m — recommended standard for driveways, car parks, and garage floors
2.5% = 1:40 = 25mm/m — maximum cross-fall for DDA-compliant pedestrian paths (AS 1428.1)
5.0% = 1:20 = 50mm/m — maximum car park aisle and bay cross-fall (AS 2890.1)
12.5% = 1:8 = 125mm/m — DDA ramp maximum gradient (with handrails and rest platforms)
20.0% = 1:5 = 200mm/m — maximum residential driveway longitudinal grade (standard vehicles)

Residential Driveways — Fall Requirements

A residential driveway concrete slab must drain water effectively from its surface under all rainfall intensities to prevent ponding, surface deterioration, and stormwater runoff entering the garage. Driveway drainage is governed by two simultaneous gradient requirements: the cross-fall (slope across the driveway width, directing water to a kerb or edge channel), and the longitudinal grade (the slope along the driveway length, from the street to the garage). In most cases the longitudinal grade of a driveway is determined by the level difference between the street and the garage floor — the cross-fall is the design variable used to ensure lateral drainage to the driveway edges. For driveways on relatively flat sites where the longitudinal grade is less than 1%, it is especially important that the cross-fall is at least 1.5–2% to ensure reliable surface drainage.

📐 Cross-Fall — Residential Driveway

The minimum cross-fall for a residential concrete driveway is 1:100 (1%) — but this is the absolute floor. In practice, AS 3727 and industry guidance recommend a cross-fall of 1:60 to 1:50 (1.67–2%) to provide reliable drainage after accounting for the ±6mm construction tolerance permitted by AS 3727 over a 3m straightedge. A 1% design cross-fall on a 3m wide driveway provides only 30mm total fall across the width — if construction tolerance reduces this by 6mm (to 24mm), the effective fall becomes 0.8%, which may be insufficient for reliable drainage. Designing to 2% provides 60mm total cross-fall across a 3m wide driveway, leaving the drainage effective even after construction tolerance is applied.

📏 Longitudinal Grade — Residential Driveway

The minimum longitudinal grade for a residential driveway is 1:100 (1%) — flatter grades cause water to pond on the driveway rather than flowing toward the street or garage. The maximum longitudinal grade for a standard residential driveway is 1:5 (20%) per AS/NZS 2890.1, though most councils cap residential driveways at 16–18% (1:6.25–1:5.5) without special approval. Very steep driveways (above 12.5%) require level transition zones — a flat or reverse-curved transition area at the street and at the garage door — to prevent low-clearance vehicles grounding on the grade change. The transition zone must be at least 1.5m long and have a grade of no more than 1:10 (10%) on residential sites per most council requirements.

🏠 Driveway — Garage Threshold Junction

The junction between the driveway and the garage floor is a critical drainage design point. The garage floor must be 50–100mm above the external driveway level at the door threshold to prevent stormwater runoff from the driveway flowing into the garage during heavy rain. This height difference — called the garage floor setback — also provides flood protection in low-lying areas. The driveway surface immediately in front of the garage door must fall away from the door face (toward the street) at a minimum 1:100 fall to prevent water ponding against the door. A channel drain across the full width of the driveway immediately in front of the garage door face is the most effective solution — it intercepts surface water before it reaches the door threshold.

🚗 Maximum Grade — Vehicle Safety

Driveway grades affect vehicle traction and control — particularly on wet concrete surfaces. Standard passenger vehicles (sedan, hatchback, SUV) can typically navigate grades up to 1:5 (20%) safely on dry concrete, reducing to approximately 1:6–1:7 (14–17%) on wet concrete. Sports cars and low-clearance vehicles may ground on grades above 1:8 (12.5%) without a transition zone. Tandem driveways (where two cars park in-line) on steep grades present additional risk — vehicles may roll if incorrectly parked. Crossfall and camber on steep driveways must be carefully designed — on a steep driveway with significant cross-fall, the composite grade may create a sideways slip risk on wet concrete for pedestrians walking alongside parked vehicles. On driveways steeper than 1:8, a broom texture perpendicular to the slope direction is the minimum required surface finish.

💧 Water Discharge — Council Requirements

Driveway surface water must be captured and managed in accordance with local council stormwater management requirements — it cannot be simply discharged to the street kerb or footpath in most Australian councils in 2026. On residential sites, driveway drainage is typically directed to an on-site stormwater system (kerb inlet, rubble pit, or detention system) before reaching the council drainage network. A kerb crossing drain or pit at the front of the driveway (between the footpath and the street kerb) is required where the driveway connects to the street to prevent driveway runoff entering the footpath. On steep driveways where vehicle wash-off and runoff velocity are high, an energy dissipator may be required before runoff enters the stormwater system.

🌊 Crowned and Cambered Driveway Profiles

Wide driveways (wider than approximately 4m) benefit from a crowned profile — a cross-section that is highest at the centreline and slopes downward to both edges, directing water to channels or kerbs on both sides. This is particularly effective for double driveways and is the standard profile for road pavements. A single-fall cross-fall profile (all water directed to one side) becomes less effective as driveway width increases, as the edge drain or kerb must handle all concentrated runoff. The crown elevation above the edge level is typically set at 1.5–2% of the half-width — for a 6m wide driveway, the crown rises approximately 45–60mm above the edge level. Crowned profiles must be established precisely in formwork using a crown screed or dual screed rail set-out.

Car Parks — AS 2890.1 Drainage Requirements

Commercial car park drainage design is governed by AS/NZS 2890.1:2004 (Parking Facilities — Off-Street Car Parking), which specifies both minimum and maximum grades for different areas of the car park. The drainage design of a car park must balance three competing requirements: effective surface drainage (water must leave the pavement surface quickly to prevent ponding and staining); vehicle manoeuvring safety (excessive cross-fall or grade creates difficulty opening car doors, increases vehicle roll risk on slopes, and makes walking between cars hazardous on wet surfaces); and DDA pedestrian access compliance (pedestrian paths through car parks must comply with AS 1428.1 cross-fall limits of 1:40 maximum). These three requirements often conflict on constrained sites, requiring careful drainage design to satisfy all simultaneously.

Channel drain at entry prevents runoff entering car park
Car Park Area Min. Grade Max. Grade (AS 2890.1) Recommended Design Notes
Parking Bays (cross-fall) 1:100 (1.0%) 1:20 (5.0%) 1:50–1:67 (1.5–2.0%) Falls directed along bay length toward aisle or drain
Drive Aisles 1:100 (1.0%) 1:20 (5.0%) 1:50 (2.0%) typical Longitudinal grade in direction of aisle travel
Internal Ramps 1:100 (1.0%) 1:6.67 (15.0%) 1:10–1:8 (10–12.5%) Transition zone required at top and bottom of ramp
Ramp Transitions 1:10 (10.0%) max within transition Min. 2.0m long transition zone Prevents vehicle grounding at grade change
Pedestrian Paths (DDA) 1:100 (1.0%) 1:40 (2.5%) cross-fall 1:80–1:60 (1.25–1.67%) AS 1428.1 compliance — 1:20 long. max without ramp
Entry / Exit Throat 1:100 (1.0%) outward 1:20 (5.0%) 1:50 (2.0%) falling to kerb
Basement Car Park (enclosed) 1:100 (1.0%) 1:20 (5.0%) 1:50 (2.0%) to pits All falls direct to sump pits — connected to sump pump system

Car Park Drainage — Quick Reference

Parking Bays Min.1:100 (1%)
Parking Bays Max.1:20 (5%)
Recommended Bays1:50 (2%)
Ramp Max. Grade1:6.67 (15%)
DDA Path Max. Cross-fall1:40 (2.5%)
Basement — to Sump1:50 (2%)

Footpaths and Pedestrian Pavements — DDA Compliance

Pedestrian footpaths in concrete must comply with both drainage requirements and the Disability Discrimination Act (DDA) 1992 and its companion standard AS 1428.1:2009 (Design for Access and Mobility). These two requirements sometimes conflict — the minimum slope needed for reliable drainage may approach the maximum slope permitted for DDA compliance, leaving very little margin for construction tolerance. AS 1428.1 sets a maximum cross-fall of 1:40 (2.5%) on pedestrian paths — beyond this gradient, wheelchair users experience significant lateral drift and difficulty maintaining a straight path, and ambulant pedestrians on wet surfaces face increased slip risk. The recommended design cross-fall for DDA-compliant concrete footpaths is 1:80 to 1:60 (1.25–1.67%), providing adequate drainage while remaining well within the 1:40 maximum and leaving margin for construction tolerance.

Longitudinal Grade — Pedestrian Ramps

The maximum longitudinal grade for a concrete pedestrian path accessible to wheelchair users without it being classified as a ramp is 1:20 (5%) per AS 1428.1. Paths steeper than 1:20 must be designed as ramps with handrails, rest platforms (at maximum 9m intervals), and DDA-compliant ramp landings. A concrete ramp for DDA access must have a maximum gradient of 1:14 (7.14%) for paths up to 9m long, or 1:8 (12.5%) for very short ramps (under 1.25m). All ramp surfaces must have a non-slip finish — a fine transverse broom texture is the minimum standard; exposed aggregate or tactile indicator strips at the top and bottom of ramps provide both slip resistance and tactile wayfinding for vision-impaired pedestrians. The cross-fall on a ramp surface must not exceed 1:50 (2%) to prevent wheelchair lateral drift on the ramp.

⚠️ Most Common Drainage Fall Errors in Concrete Pavements

(1) Designing to exactly the minimum fall without tolerance allowance — a 1:100 design fall on a 3m wide surface provides only 30mm total fall. Construction tolerance of ±6mm means the actual fall could be as low as 24mm (0.8%) — insufficient for reliable drainage. Always design to 1:60–1:50 (1.67–2%) minimum for outdoor pavements to accommodate construction tolerance. (2) Setting screed rails level or to feel — without accurately levelled screed rails set to the design falls using a laser level or water level, concrete finishers have no way to achieve consistent drainage falls across the full slab width. Set screed rails to calculated heights at every 2–3m interval along the full pour length. (3) Ignoring the composite grade — a pavement with a 2% cross-fall and a 15% longitudinal grade has a composite grade of 15.1% — effectively all fall is longitudinal. On steep driveways, cross-fall may be unnecessary and can create a camber that makes door-opening and pedestrian movement difficult. (4) Drainage falls not checked before formwork stripped — surface falls must be verified with a straightedge and level before the slab is first trafficked. Grinding a low spot out of finished concrete costs orders of magnitude more than correcting a screed rail before the pour.

Setting Out Drainage Falls in Formwork

Achieving the specified drainage falls in a concrete pavement requires accurate set-out of the formwork and screed rails before concrete is placed — the falls are built into the formwork, not applied to the concrete after placement. Once the concrete is struck off level with the screed rails, the drainage falls are fixed. Any error in the screed rail levels will be reflected exactly in the finished concrete surface. The set-out process begins by establishing a datum level at a fixed reference point (typically the finished floor level at the highest corner of the pour), then calculating the required level at every intermediate control point using the design falls and the pavement dimensions.

Calculating Screed Rail Heights

To calculate the required screed rail height at any point on the slab, multiply the design fall (expressed in mm/m) by the horizontal distance from the datum point. For a garage slab with a 1% (10mm/m) fall toward the door, 6m deep: the finished floor level at the rear wall is the datum (highest point); the finished floor level at the door threshold is 6.0m × 10mm/m = 60mm below the datum. The screed rail at 3m from the rear wall is set at 30mm below the datum level. This calculation is repeated for every screed rail position and checked with a laser level or digital level before concrete is ordered. A common practical tool is a 2m digital slope finder (digital level showing % gradient directly) — place it along the screed rail after setting and verify the reading matches the design fall before proceeding.

✅ Drainage Falls Design Checklist 2026

  • Establish drainage fall requirements before formwork set-out — check the relevant standard (AS 3727, AS 2890.1, AS 1428.1, council requirement)
  • Design to 1.5–2% minimum for all outdoor exposed concrete pavements to accommodate ±6mm construction tolerance
  • Garage slab: minimum 1:100 (1%) — 10mm/m fall to door threshold or floor drain — non-negotiable
  • Identify the drainage collection system (kerb, edge channel, strip drain, pit drain) and confirm its finished level before setting slab falls
  • Calculate screed rail heights at every 2–3m interval and record on a pour-level drawing before concrete is ordered
  • Set and check screed rails with laser level or digital slope finder to ±3mm — do not rely on visual estimation
  • Check composite grade where cross-fall and longitudinal grade act simultaneously — verify against pedestrian and vehicle safety limits
  • DDA paths: cross-fall max 1:40 (2.5%) — design to 1:80 (1.25%) to accommodate construction tolerance
  • Car park ramps: max 1:6.67 (15%) grade + transition zones at top and bottom — verify vehicle clearance
  • Check falls with straightedge and level within 4 hours of pour while concrete is still workable enough for limited remediation
  • Document achieved falls on as-built survey for the project record — required on commercial projects and recommended on residential

Frequently Asked Questions — Drainage Slopes in Concrete Pavements

What is the minimum drainage fall for a concrete driveway?
The minimum cross-fall for a residential concrete driveway is 1:100 (1% or 10mm/m) — this is the absolute regulatory minimum for reliable surface drainage. However, designing to exactly 1:100 is not recommended in practice because the AS 3727 construction tolerance of ±6mm over 3m means the actual installed fall could be as low as 0.8%, which is marginal for drainage on a textured concrete surface. The recommended design cross-fall for a residential driveway is 1:60 to 1:50 (1.67–2%), which provides a robust drainage outcome even after construction tolerance is applied. For the longitudinal grade (the slope from the street up to the garage), the minimum is also 1:100 — and the maximum for standard vehicles without special transition zones is 1:5 (20%). Most councils cap residential driveways at 16–18% — always check with your local council before finalising the driveway design on steep sites.
What is the minimum drainage fall for a garage slab?
The minimum surface fall for a residential garage concrete slab is 1:100 (1% or 10mm/m) — this is an absolute requirement for all garage slabs, not optional. The fall must be directed toward the open garage door face (discharging to the driveway outside), toward an internal floor drain pit at the front of the slab, or toward a channel drain across the full door width at the threshold. For a standard 6m deep garage with a 1% fall, the finished floor level at the rear wall must be 60mm above the floor level at the door threshold. This fall must be established in the formwork screed rails before concrete is placed — it cannot be ground into the surface after placement without specialist diamond grinding equipment. A 2% fall (20mm/m) is preferred where site levels allow, as it provides more reliable drainage and makes the floor easier to hose clean. Never slope the garage floor downward toward the rear wall — this is a common construction error that pools water and chemicals at the garage back wall.
What does 1:100, 1% and 10mm/m mean — are they the same?
Yes — 1:100, 1%, and 10mm/m are all identical expressions of the same drainage fall, just written in three different notations used in different contexts. The ratio 1:100 means the surface drops 1mm vertically for every 100mm of horizontal run. The percentage 1% means the surface drops 1mm per 100mm of run — exactly the same as 1:100. The mm/m notation 10mm/m means the surface drops 10mm for every 1,000mm (1 metre) of run — again identical to 1:100 and 1%, because 10mm drop per 1,000mm run = 1mm drop per 100mm run = 1%. The three notations are freely interchangeable: to convert a ratio to a percentage, divide 1 by the second number and multiply by 100 (1 ÷ 100 × 100 = 1%). To convert a percentage to mm/m, multiply by 10 (1% × 10 = 10mm/m). The mm/m notation is the most useful on site — setting a 2m spirit level with a 20mm packer under one end gives exactly 1% (10mm/m) fall when the bubble reads level.
What is the maximum slope allowed for a concrete footpath for wheelchair access?
Per AS 1428.1:2009 (Design for Access and Mobility) — the Australian standard governing DDA-compliant access — the maximum cross-fall (slope perpendicular to the direction of travel) on a pedestrian path accessible to wheelchair users is 1:40 (2.5%). Beyond this gradient, lateral drift of wheelchairs becomes difficult to control. The maximum longitudinal grade (slope in the direction of travel) for a path that is not classified as a ramp is 1:20 (5%). Paths steeper than 1:20 must be designed as accessible ramps, with a maximum gradient of 1:14 (7.14%) for runs up to 9m, and 1:8 (12.5%) for very short ramps under 1.25m in length — both requiring compliant handrails, edge protection, landings, and non-slip surface texture. In practice, concrete footpaths should be designed to a cross-fall of 1:80 to 1:60 (1.25–1.67%) to ensure both reliable drainage and DDA compliance after accounting for construction tolerance.
What are the drainage fall requirements for a commercial car park per AS 2890.1?
Per AS/NZS 2890.1:2004 (Parking Facilities — Off-Street Car Parking), the drainage fall requirements for commercial car parks are: Parking bays: minimum 1:100 (1%), maximum 1:20 (5%) cross-fall — recommended design 1:50 (2%) in the direction of drainage. Drive aisles: minimum 1:100 (1%), maximum 1:20 (5%) — typically 1:50 (2%) recommended. Internal ramps: minimum 1:100 (1%) cross drainage, maximum 1:6.67 (15%) longitudinal grade for standard ramps. Ramp transition zones: a minimum 2m long transition zone at the top and bottom of each ramp, with a maximum gradient of 1:10 (10%) within the transition, to prevent vehicle grounding at the grade change. Pedestrian paths: must comply with AS 1428.1 — maximum 1:40 (2.5%) cross-fall. For basement car parks, all surface falls must drain to sump pits connected to pump-out systems, as gravity drainage to street level is not possible.
How do I correct a concrete pavement that does not drain correctly?
Correcting a concrete pavement that ponds water due to insufficient drainage falls is expensive and technically challenging — which is why getting the falls right in the formwork at construction is so important. The available remediation options, in order of increasing cost and disruption, are: (1) Surface grinding — diamond grinding equipment can grind down high spots on the slab to create drainage falls. This is suitable for localised ponding areas and smooth-finished slabs. It removes concrete cover to the reinforcement on thinner slabs, so depth of grinding must be checked against reinforcement cover. (2) Polymer overlay — a thin (5–15mm) polymer-modified or epoxy overlay can be applied to the existing slab surface with the drainage falls built into the overlay. This is effective for large areas and provides a fresh surface — but adds height to the floor, which may conflict with door clearances and adjacent levels. (3) Break out and relay — the most costly but most reliable solution. Where drainage deficiencies are severe and widespread, breaking out the existing slab and relaying with correct falls from a correctly set-out base is often more economical in the long run than multiple remediation attempts. (4) Drainage channels — installing additional slot or strip drains in the slab surface at the low points can reduce the visible ponding area even if falls cannot be corrected — this is a pragmatic interim solution.

Pavement Drainage Standards & Resources

📘 Governing Standards 2026

Drainage fall requirements for concrete pavements in Australia are governed by AS 3727:1993 (Guide to Residential Pavements) for driveways and paths, AS/NZS 2890.1:2004 for off-street parking facilities, AS 1428.1:2009 for DDA-compliant pedestrian access, and the NCC 2026 Volume Two for residential site drainage. Industrial floor drainage guidance is drawn from TR34 (Concrete Society UK) and AS 3600. Local council stormwater management plans and development conditions also specify drainage requirements that may be more stringent than the referenced standards — always verify project-specific requirements with the relevant authority early in the design process.

Garage Slab Design Guide →

🔧 Set-Out Tools & Methods

Accurate drainage fall set-out in concrete formwork requires a rotating laser level or builder's level to establish a datum and transfer it to screed rail heights across the full pour area. A digital slope finder (digital level displaying % gradient directly) is the most practical verification tool — place it on the screed rail after setting and read the fall percentage directly. On small pours, a 2m spirit level with a calibrated wedge (e.g., a 20mm packer at one end sets exactly 1% fall over 2m) can be used. All screed rail heights should be recorded on a pour-level sketch before concrete is ordered, and re-verified after formwork is set and before concrete placement commences.

Concrete Sampling Guide →

🌊 Stormwater & Council Compliance

In Australia in 2026, stormwater runoff from new and extended concrete pavements is increasingly regulated — many councils require on-site stormwater detention for paved areas exceeding a threshold size (typically 50–100m² of new impervious surface on residential sites). Before finalising driveway or car park drainage design, check whether a stormwater management plan is required as part of the development approval, and whether any water sensitive urban design (WSUD) measures — permeable paving strips, raingarden edges, or detention tanks — are required to offset the increased runoff from the new pavement. Drainage designs that simply discharge all pavement runoff to the street kerb without on-site management are increasingly non-compliant with contemporary council DCP requirements.

Retaining Wall Guide →