pago cruiser
Well-known member
Finally - after about 10 years...
getting my 40x30 started. Sticks and stucco, nothing fancy. But part of my driveway has a short (50') length of 16% slope, and the garage approach has a cross-slope I am trying to minimize.
Need about 200 LF of 2-4+ foot retaining wall, in basically a long arc. This will contain about 500 yards of fill, and bring the garage approach to about a 5% slope; which I think I can live with. I would also be adding to one side of the driveway in order to level it as well. So this will be vehicular load bearing.
Have looked at massive overfill (basically fill dirt sloughed out for 10-15 feet from the finished edge) poured concrete retaining wall (really, really pricey), concrete footings and blocks (really pricey), segmented blocks (pricey), gabions pricey, but I do not know why? metal baskets and river rock), shotcrete (lots of big equipment and skilled labor = kinda pricey), and today a local Contractor suggested to just keep it simple and cost efficient - Riprap.
Property is outside Tucson, 4000' foot elevation, and I am on a hilltop - so no drainage or groundwater issues. While southern AZ gets their usual monsoons (as they call them, with their about 6" total during the summer - which is actually rather farcical if you have ever lived in a rain forest that sees 200" a year... but I digress), it is generally dry. Hence, the desert moniker. So I am not too concerned with water issues undermining or washing away the rocks.
Has anybody used this for this application? Pics? Tips? Issues?
Thanks.
Kinda like this; but a little taller, lots longer, with 5-7" rocks:
getting my 40x30 started. Sticks and stucco, nothing fancy. But part of my driveway has a short (50') length of 16% slope, and the garage approach has a cross-slope I am trying to minimize.Need about 200 LF of 2-4+ foot retaining wall, in basically a long arc. This will contain about 500 yards of fill, and bring the garage approach to about a 5% slope; which I think I can live with. I would also be adding to one side of the driveway in order to level it as well. So this will be vehicular load bearing.
Have looked at massive overfill (basically fill dirt sloughed out for 10-15 feet from the finished edge) poured concrete retaining wall (really, really pricey), concrete footings and blocks (really pricey), segmented blocks (pricey), gabions pricey, but I do not know why? metal baskets and river rock), shotcrete (lots of big equipment and skilled labor = kinda pricey), and today a local Contractor suggested to just keep it simple and cost efficient - Riprap.
Property is outside Tucson, 4000' foot elevation, and I am on a hilltop - so no drainage or groundwater issues. While southern AZ gets their usual monsoons (as they call them, with their about 6" total during the summer - which is actually rather farcical if you have ever lived in a rain forest that sees 200" a year... but I digress), it is generally dry. Hence, the desert moniker. So I am not too concerned with water issues undermining or washing away the rocks.
Has anybody used this for this application? Pics? Tips? Issues?
Thanks.
Kinda like this; but a little taller, lots longer, with 5-7" rocks:






