What is a French drain?

Have you ever experienced a flood garage or water seeping into your house? Then chances are you have a poorly designed driveway.
Ideally your driveway should be downward sloping away from your house carrying any excess water away from your house (not towards it). This would prevent flooding in your garage or house.
If water is flooding your driveway or house frequently, consider installing driveway drain in between your garage and your driveway to prevent your garage from flooding.
You can look at installing a french drain or trench drain (link to Blog Post 3: Channel Drains and Trench Drains).
To get more detail about trench drain, click here: Blog Post 3: Channel Drains and Trench Drains
Introduced by the French and popular in France back in the 1800s, a French drain (also called weeping tile. blind drain, rubble drain, rock drain, drain tile, perimeter drain, land drain, French ditch, sub-surface drain, sub-soil drain or agricultural drain) is a trench filled with rock or gravel or containing a perforated pipe that redirects surface water and groundwater away from a place. A French drain can have perforated hollow pipes along the bottom to quickly vent water that seeps down through the upper gravel or rock.
Depending on severity of the flooding you have in your driveway, speak to a landscaping expert to advise you on the different types of drains you should install in order to prevent further flooding.
To maintain the aesthetics of your driveway when you install a french drain or trench drain, consider our Jonite number of products where our steel reinforced drain covers (gratings for french drains or trench drains) can blend into the existing interior or exterior landscaping Jonite drain channel grate of your driveway, garage and home.
Check out our creative grates here (http://www.jonite.us/products/usa-decorative-grates) for various unique designs and here (http://www.jonite.us/products/ Jonite trench grates -grates)