| Parameter | Specification |
|---|---|
| Product Type | Modular lawn protection event flooring tile / light-permeable PP tile |
| Primary Commercial Name | Light-permeable PP lawn protection event flooring tile |
| Target Applications | Sports center events; large-scale performances; festival performances; concerts; outdoor weddings; temporary event installations on turf |
| Dimensions per Piece | 60 × 33 × 3 cm (± 3% dimensional tolerance) |
| Material | Impact-resistant polymer material; light-permeable type |
| Recyclability | 100% recyclable; environmentally friendly |
| Base Structure | Hexagonal structure support at the bottom |
| Ventilation Features | Larger space at the bottom; air holes |
| Connection System | Shaft snap joints; concealed groove design; snap joints remain unexposed |
| Bearing Capacity | Flooring bearing capacity > 15 tons per square meter |
| Turf Protection | Lawn protection without damaging turf; conducive to the lawn's growth |
| Air Permeability | Facilitates air permeability and moisture retention |
| Light Permeability | Confirmed light-permeable construction; supports photosynthesis beneath tile |
| Load Enhancement | Enhanced bearing capacity for temporary heavy equipment events |
| Damage Reduction | Reducing likelihood of turf damage under event loads |
| Reusability | Reusable; designed for multi-event deployment and reuse |
| Installation Speed | Fast installation via shaft snap joints; modular panel handling |
| Surface Safety | Surface safety and stable footing for event participants |
| Aesthetic | Enhancing overall aesthetic appeal; concealed joint design |
Q1: How does a bearing capacity of >15 tons per square meter translate to real-world equipment support at events?
At a bearing capacity greater than 15 tons per square meter, a single square meter of installed tile surface can support static loads equivalent to a loaded articulated truck axle, a professional concert stage section with rigging dead-loads, a diesel generator set, or multiple layers of crowd barrier and production infrastructure concentrated in a small footprint. For event production procurement, the relevant engineering question is not just the peak static load but the distribution of that load across the tile array: the hexagonal base structure spreads applied point loads across multiple support points per tile and across adjacent tiles through the interlocking connection, reducing the peak contact pressure on the turf beneath. Buyers specifying this tile for events with known equipment loads — particularly vehicle access routes or stage dead-loads — should confirm the applicable static and dynamic load test documentation — [Insert Certification / Load Test Rating if Available] — and review load distribution calculations with their structural engineer to confirm adequate coverage area for the equipment footprint. For events with loads significantly below 15 tons/m², the tile provides a substantial safety margin that accommodates concentrated crowd loading and dynamic foot traffic without approaching the bearing capacity limit.
Q2: How do the larger base space and air holes preserve turf health during multi-day event coverage?
Grass requires three things to survive coverage: light for photosynthesis, carbon dioxide and oxygen exchange for respiration, and moisture access from precipitation or irrigation. Opaque temporary flooring that seals against the turf surface interrupts all three simultaneously, leading to blanching, cell death, and root damage within one to three days depending on grass species, season, and weather conditions. The light-permeable tile construction addresses light transmission; the larger base space creates a continuous air gap between the tile underside and the turf surface through which gas exchange occurs; and the air holes provide additional ventilation paths and allow water from irrigation or rainfall to penetrate to the root zone during coverage periods. Together, these three mechanisms sustain the minimum biological conditions for grass survival across multi-day event installations, reducing the turf reinstatement cost and timeline that would otherwise follow event removal. Buyers covering high-value sports turf — particularly FIFA-standard football pitches or professional cricket outfields — should confirm the acceptable coverage duration for their specific grass species and season with their head groundskeeper before finalising event scheduling around tile coverage periods.
Q3: How do shaft snap joints accelerate installation and disassembly on large event sites?
Event installation windows are typically compressed within a pre-determined site access period — often 24 to 72 hours for large-scale events — during which all temporary infrastructure including flooring must be installed before the event program begins. The shaft snap joint mechanism allows each tile to be connected to its neighbors through a direct push engagement without tools, fasteners, or adhesive, enabling installation at a rate limited by crew movement and panel handling speed rather than by joint assembly time. For large event areas requiring thousands of square meters of coverage, this installation rate advantage directly translates into reduced crew-hours and lower labor cost relative to tile systems requiring mechanical fastening. The same tool-free mechanism enables post-event disassembly within the post-event site clearance window, and panels can be stacked for transport and storage directly after removal without cleaning or preparation steps. Buyers planning installations across multiple events per season should confirm with the supplier the recommended stacking height and storage conditions to maintain shaft snap joint integrity across the reuse lifecycle.
Q4: How does the concealed groove design protect the connection mechanism and maintain surface safety for event participants?
Exposed interlocking joint profiles — where the connection tab or socket rises above the tile walking surface — create two risks in event environments: they form raised edge discontinuities that can catch footwear and cause trips for moving event participants, and they expose the joint mechanism to direct foot traffic loading, contamination from soil and debris, and mechanical damage from equipment wheels, which progressively reduces connection engagement force and increases the risk of spontaneous joint disengagement under crowd loading. The concealed groove design addresses both risks by recessing the snap joint connection below the tile surface plane, so that the tile's walking surface is continuous and flush across the joint line at the assembled surface level. The exposed surface presents no protruding edge to footwear or equipment wheels, and the joint mechanism is protected from direct loading by the tile body's surface section. This design also contributes to the tile's "enhancing overall aesthetic appeal" designation, as a smooth, joint-line-free surface presents a more polished appearance at high-visibility events such as concerts and outdoor weddings where surface aesthetics affect the event's visual environment.