Calculatrice Escaliers Béton
Dernière mise à jour: 2026-06-23
Entrez votre email et téléchargez un rapport PDF avec vos résultats.
| Hauteur totale (m) | Longueur totale (m) | Largeur de marche (m) | Hauteur du contremarche (cm) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caso 1 | 0.4 m | 1.0 m | 0.5 m | 10.0 cm |
| Caso 2 | 0.7 m | 1.75 m | 0.84 m | 12.6 cm |
| Caso 3 | 1.0 m | 2.5 m | 1.2 m | 18.0 cm |
| Caso 4 | 1.5 m | 3.75 m | 1.8 m | 25.0 cm |
| Caso 5 | 2.5 m | 6.25 m | 3.0 m | 25.0 cm |
Qu'est-ce que le Concrete Steps Calculator?
Building concrete steps is a precision task — the ratio of riser height to tread depth determines safety and comfort. The classic rule is that 2 × riser + tread = 630 mm (the comfortable stride). This calculator works out how many steps fit your total rise and run, checks the riser-to-tread ratio, and calculates the concrete volume needed to pour them.
You may also find the Retaining Wall Calculator, Paver Calculator, and Mass Concrete Calculator useful.
Qui utilise cette calculatrice?
This tool is used by homeowners building entrance steps, landscapers constructing garden stairs, and contractors forming concrete stairways.
Comment utiliser the Concrete Steps Calculator
- Saisissez votre Total rise.
- Saisissez votre Total run.
- Saisissez votre Step width.
- Saisissez votre Riser height.
- Cliquez sur Calculer pour voir vos résultats instantanément.
Formule
The calculator uses the following formula:
Steps = round(total_rise ÷ riser_height); Tread = total_run ÷ steps; Concrete = steps × width × riser × tread / 2
Exemple de calcul
A 1.05 m total rise with 0.175 m risers, 1.2 m step width, and 0.28 m treads needs 6 steps and approximately 0.35 m³ of concrete.
Calcul étape par étape
- Number of steps: round(90 cm ÷ 18 cm) = 5 steps
- Tread depth: 180 cm ÷ 5 = 36 cm per tread
- Stringer length: sqrt(90² + 180²) = 201 cm ≈ 2.01 m
- Concrete volume (staircase prism): 5 × 1.2 × 0.18 × 0.36 ÷ 2 = 0.19 m³
Erreurs courantes à éviter
- Using riser height outside the 15–20 cm comfort zone for walking
- Forgetting that the last step lands on existing grade — adjust total rise accordingly
- Not adding landing slabs at the top and bottom