Design relaxed seating zones across patios and lawns. Balance traffic flow, sunlight, and privacy comfortably. Place every lounge with confident spacing and easy access.
| Area (L x W) | Lounge (L x W) | Edge / Side / Row | Layout | Estimated Fit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8.0 x 5.0 m | 2.0 x 0.75 m | 0.9 / 0.6 / 0.75 m | Straight grid | 8 lounges (4 x 2) |
| 10 x 6 m | 2.1 x 0.8 m | 1.0 / 0.8 / 0.9 m | Head-to-toe | 10 lounges (5 x 2) |
| 24 x 16 ft | 6.5 x 2.5 ft | 3 / 2.5 / 3 ft | Straight grid | 6 lounges (3 x 2) |
| 9 x 4 m | 2.0 x 0.75 m | 0.8 / 0.6 / 0.75 m | Diagonal 15 degrees | 6–7 lounges |
| 12 x 7 m | 2.0 x 0.75 m | 1.2 / 0.9 / 1.0 m | Grid + aisle | 12 lounges with better flow |
The calculator converts your inputs into a usable area by subtracting perimeter clearance: usable_length = area_length − 2×edge_clearance and usable_width = area_width − 2×edge_clearance.
For diagonal layouts, the lounge rectangle is rotated and its axis-aligned bounding box is used: effL = L·cos(a) + W·sin(a), effW = L·sin(a) + W·cos(a).
Columns and rows are estimated with shared gaps: cols = floor((usable_width + side_gap) / (effW + side_gap)). Rows include optional access aisles every N rows by adding aisle width into used length.
Total lounges are rows × cols, with an optional staggered-row bonus when leftover width can safely fit an extra lounge on alternating rows.
Chaise lounges look simple, but spacing controls comfort, safety, and how open a garden seating zone feels. This calculator starts with the measured area, subtracts perimeter clearance, then estimates how many lounges fit in rows and columns. Using consistent rules avoids the common mistake of placing furniture by eye and later discovering blocked paths or awkward squeeze points. It also reports occupied dimensions and remaining space, helping you choose between denser seating and a calmer, resort-like layout today.
For light foot traffic, many patios work well with 0.60–0.90 m side gaps and 0.75–1.20 m row gaps. A larger edge clearance (about 0.90 m) helps when the boundary includes planters, railings, pool coping, or planting beds. Tight values may increase capacity, but they can reduce usable walking width, especially when someone reclines fully or uses a side table.
A straight grid maximizes packing and keeps circulation predictable. Head-to-toe alternating can improve privacy and sightlines without changing the footprint; it is often preferred near dining zones or outdoor kitchens. Diagonal placement can look premium, but the rotated footprint usually wastes corners. Angles above 35° commonly reduce capacity and may require wider gaps to maintain clean paths.
When you expect steady movement—serving drinks, supervising kids, or pool access—add an aisle. A 0.90–1.20 m aisle supports comfortable pass-by and reduces bottlenecks. The calculator can insert an aisle every N rows, trading a small count reduction for better usability. Staggering alternate rows may add an extra lounge when leftover width is sufficient.
Surface choice changes stability. On grass, legs can sink, so use pads and recheck spacing after a week. On decks, confirm load limits and keep a clear route along board direction. On pavers, set legs on stable joints. If slope reaches 3–6°, consider leveling mats; above 6°, prioritize safety and widen clearances.
It reserves space along boundaries for walking, doors, planters, railings, and recline movement. It also reduces splash-zone crowding near pools and keeps furniture away from heat sources like grills.
Rotating a rectangle creates a larger effective bounding box, which wastes corner space. The visual style is nice, but the footprint usually needs wider gaps to maintain straight walking lines.
Start with 0.60–0.90 m side gaps and 0.75–1.20 m row gaps. Increase values when you expect frequent pass-by, users with mobility needs, or side tables that stay in place.
Add one when people will regularly cross the layout, such as pool circulation, serving, or supervising children. A 0.90–1.20 m aisle improves flow and reduces trips, even if it lowers the lounge count.
Auto tests both directions: lounges aligned with the area length and rotated to align with the area width. The calculator selects the option with higher capacity, then breaks ties using fewer tight-clearance notes.
Yes, estimate an effective rectangle for the main seating zone and keep extra clearance near curves, steps, or planting beds. For L-shapes, run two smaller rectangles and combine counts conservatively.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.