
Retaining Walls
Although most
of the retaining walls that the average homeowner sees are used to hold
back the earth, there are many uses for these walls including the
slowing of the erosion of riverbanks. There’s more to building one than
meets the eye, and a proper retaining wall will do it’s job for years to
come, but one that’s not constructed properly can have the opposite
effect of what its designed for.
One of the
big reasons for a retaining wall comes when you live in a part of the
country where the ground is not level. People who live around mountains
and such are quite familiar with the need for these retaining walls. And
this isn’t something new in construction that’s just come about with our
modern times either. Retaining walls have been used for thousands of
years and were even used in Roman times when they used this type of
construction to build their roads.
Even the
famous rice paddies of Asia and some of the great castles in Europe took
advantage of this technology. Over their long history there have been
four basic types of retaining walls that have come out of their long
evolution. The first of these is called the Buttressed Retaining Wall
and it’s named as such because the real supports come from the
buttresses that are visible from the outside of the system. This is an
incredibly strong way of building one of these since the only way for
the entire wall to fall is for these buttresses to be smashed. This is
the model that was used most often in the castles of Europe that are
still standing today.
The Gravity
Retaining Wall is all about stacking enough material so that it forces
the material behind it to stay back. This is really the simplest kind of
retaining wall and it is almost always thicker at the base than at the
top—as these walls get taller they should get thinner as well and one of
the biggest disadvantages here is that these walls require a lot of
material to build properly.
The
Cantilever Wall is the same thickness all the way through and these are
generally affixed at a footing. Because these walls generally hold back
a great mass of something, it’s generally a good idea to have these
walls engineered by an expert who can make all the right calculations.
The last option that you’ve got when it comes to retaining walls is the
Counterfort Retaining Wall and this one has a triangular ‘wall’ built
within the other outer wall to give it strength and support.
Regardless of
the kind of retaining wall that you pick for the job that you’ve got a
hand, you should always be careful to make sure that the one you select
is the one that can do the job properly. As well, you should call in a
professional when you aren’t sure of your own design.
Olympian Civil Home and Building Inspections (866) 476-2056
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2008
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