Retaining wall basics

Blog Post
Picture showing a retaining wall

Retaining walls can be tricky to build as they need to be strong enough to resist horizontal soil pressure where there are differing ground levels.

One of the things you must get right is the thickness of the wall. It should be at least 215mm thick and bonded or made of two separate brick skins tied together.

This should be enough in most cases with minimal water pressure or where the ground level difference is less than a metre.

You also need to consider the effect of ground water, which can create huge pressure on the wall and soak the brickwork if allowed to accumulate behind. Create a way out for the water by adding a gravel trench and pipes through the wall.

If not properly constructed, water can also penetrate the brickwork structure from above through the mortar joints, affecting the long-term durability of the retaining wall. So add brick copings, which must always be F2, S2 (frost-resistant low soluble salts), with an overhang and drip groove to minimise water damage.

Important points about retaining walls

  • Don't forget to include movement joints in the wall and use piers on either side to increase strength at the movement joint position.
  • If you're using two separate brick skins in stretcher bond, you have to provide reinforcement by tying them together. Use stainless steel bed-joint reinforcement every third course to boost the strength.
  • Use a high-bond damp proof course below the capping/coping and sandwich the DPC in mortar.
  • Waterproof the retaining side of the wall and allow water to drain away from this side through weep holes/pipes.
  • Slope paving away from the wall and provide gravel drainage strips where possible.
  • Don't forget to protect waterproofing from damage while you’re building.
  • Don't build higher than one metre without involving a structural engineer.

Want to find out more about this type of work? Visit these links:

 

Please Note: Every care was taken to ensure the information was correct at the time of publication. Any written guidance provided does not replace the user’s professional judgement. It is the responsibility of the dutyholder or person carrying out the work to ensure compliance with relevant building regulations or applicable technical standards.

Comments

Reply

Submitted 3 years 9 months ago

Hello there - thanks for your comment

In general terms there is no minimum distance that someone can build from a retaining wall. In many situations a retaining wall may form the line of the building itself.

In your situation you should ascertain what the condition of the wall and its foundations are. It would be best to consult a structural engineer who'll be able to assess the existing retaining wall and ground conditions for you and advise on the position of the proposed cabin.

Kind regards
Trevor, LABC

Garden retaining wall

Submitted 3 years 11 months ago

Would a boundary retaining wall approximately 2m high and 16m long need; structural calculations, planning permission and building control involved?

Retaining Wall

Submitted 3 years 10 months ago

Hi,

My Garden is 7000 mm wide, the last 1000mm (left side) of its length slopes down 500 mm to a thin wooden fence which is giving out due to the ground pressure/subsidence from my side. The ground level the other side of this fence is a further 500 mm down, and then slopes downward to 600 mm over about 2000 mm before coming against a 9" brick wall, that is next door's (behind) retaining wall.

I would like to make my garden level, i.e. approx. 1600 mm above the top of next door's retaining wall (not sure how tall that is), and then put a large shed on it. Could you please tell me the best way to retain my garden and the ground the shed would stand on?

Retaining wall for driveway

Submitted 3 years 9 months ago

Please can you help! I'm currently having a raised drive way built, with a retaining wall across the front. It's 7 metres across and 4 deep, the wall is one metre high. My builder is telling me that 140mm thick bricks will be strong enough to hold it. It will have a Piller of concrete blocks in the corners but no other re-enforcement. The inside is made of mostly crushed concrete and is being packed by driving a digger over it. Do you think this will be strong enough to hold 2 cars?

Reply

Submitted 3 years 8 months ago

Hello there - thanks for getting in touch.

If you propose to undertake a retaining wall as part of any building work covered by the building regulations we would always recommend that you seek appropriate professional advice from a suitably qualified structural engineer who will be able to advise regarding bespoke solutions.

Kind regards
Julie, LABC

Garden level/right to support of land

Submitted 3 years 8 months ago

Just after some advice really.

I live hill, and every two houses share a garden, separated by a fence (every second/fourth house has a retaining wall). My neighbour who shares the same garden level as me has dug out a substantial part of his garden to level it off. It would have made more sense for him to have added soil to the sloping part of the garden but he didn't.

Anyway, our garden now is I would say about 1 foot higher than his. I have had a builder around to do some other work and he said that my neighbour has undermined not only the land but the fence posts and fence.

I have previously had advice from a solicitor regarding this and was told that my neighbour has to build a retaining wall.

So far he has refused. Is there anything further I can do without going to Court?

Retaining wall behind new build

Submitted 3 years 8 months ago

We need to build a reraining wall 7ft high along back of build. Its a landscape wall. Approx 1.2m away from build. Could we use a 6," flat (440mm) width as a retaining wall or do we have to go double block.
Cheers

Reply

Submitted 3 years 8 months ago

Hello there - thanks for getting in touch.

If you propose to undertake a retaining wall as part of any building work covered by the building regulations we would always recommend that you seek appropriate professional advice from a suitably qualified structural engineer who will be able to advise regarding bespoke solutions.

Kind regards
Julie, LABC

Retaining wall

Submitted 3 years 7 months ago

I have removed a retaining wall in my garden so I can build a cart lodge so we can park our car. I am confused as to what Blocks I should build my new wall with I am going to have a green slopping planted roof to match the house any advice would be helpful.

retaining structures

Submitted 3 years ago

A large housing development (almost 500 houses) is proposed on land adjacent to a relative's home which slopes upwards to the canal embankment. Outline planning consent was granted, with all matters except access 'reserved'. The full planning application is imminent but residents have serious concerns about the proposals. The land is designated as a brownfield site though it was originally reclaimed by the local authority as open space for public use. The land is poor, a layer of up to 7metres being reclaimed (and presumably contaminated) colliery spoil - a certain depth of which will be removed and replaced in a cut and fill operation. The land was reclaimed in the late 1970s and documentation reveals that under the spoil layer, the land was very marshy and waterlogged. In fact, the land at the bottom of this man made slope, on which the existing bungalows sit, is classed as a Zone 3 Flood Risk area. It is proposed to install 'retaining structures' on the boundary between existing properties at the bottom of the slope, with an additional garden fence on top of the retaining structure. No details are yet available about the nature of these retaining structures. Residents are concerned both about the effect on their gardens of run-off or seepage from the new estate and also what will happen if the retaining structures fail due in the future because they are not able to be maintained (no access?) and who would be responsible if there was any land slip which affects their homes. Unfortunately residents have little confidence in the local authority which is selling the land to the developer and is at therefore deemed to be an interested party. What questions do they need to ask and what assurances should they seek?

Ychwanegu sylw newydd

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