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How the Volume and Material Calculations Work
The volume formula depends on the shape you pick. Slab/footing: volume = length × width × thickness. For example, a 4m × 3m slab at 0.1m thick = 1.2 m³. Cylinder (column/footing): volume = π × (diameter ÷ 2)² × height. A 0.3m-diameter, 3m-tall column comes out to 3.14159 × 0.15² × 3 ≈ 0.212 m³. Stairs use a triangular-prism approximation: volume = width × number of steps × (rise × run) ÷ 2. The result is then multiplied by your chosen waste/overage % to get the volume to actually order or pour. For the material estimate, we apply the widely used construction-estimating rule of a nominal 1:2:4 mix (cement:sand:coarse aggregate by volume) with a dry-volume factor of 1.54 — dry, loose materials need roughly 1.54× more volume than the finished wet concrete because the particles pack tighter once mixed and hydrated. Example: 1.2 m³ total pour → dry volume 1.2 × 1.54 = 1.848 m³ → cement 1.848/7 = 0.264 m³ → at 1,440 kg/m³ that is about 380 kg → roughly 10 bags of 40kg cement. Sand comes out to 1.848 × 2/7 = 0.528 m³ (about 845 kg), and gravel to 1.848 × 4/7 = 1.056 m³ (about 1,605 kg).