Driveway surfacing materials like concrete, asphalt and clay brick usually crack because they’ve been exposed to extreme temperatures or put under high pressure. It’s important to repair driveway cracks before they get worse and cause damage to vehicles and perhaps others to trip on raised cracks.
Melton Constable
Melton Constable is a village and civil parish in the English area of Norfolk. It covers a location of 6.96 km2 (2.69 sq mi) as well as had a population of 518 in 225 homes at the 2001 census. The population had raised to 618 at the 2011 Census. For the objectives of local government, it falls within the district of North Norfolk. The village rests on relatively high ground south-west of Holt. The place-name 'Melton Constable' is first attested in the Domesday Book of 1086, where it looks like 'Maeltuna'. This may suggest either 'middle community' or 'mill town'. There is a referral to 'Constabularius de Melton' in 1197, as the land was held by the constable of the diocesan of Norwich. Melton Constable Hall is regarded as the finest specimen of the Christopher Wren design of house. The church of St Peter's Melton Constable lies within Melton Constable park; it includes lots of monuments to the Astley family, that previously lived at Melton Constable Hall.
