March-April 2002

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Retaining Walls: Looks Do Matter

More than just holding back soil, retaining walls are blending in, shaping up, and even blooming.

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By Janis Keating

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When building retaining walls, the initial considerations are always practical. The finished wall needs to be strong; it must have integrity, whatever its height; it should offer ease and speed of application; and it must do the job for which it's intended. The result: a tough wall for a tough job.

But there's more to life than just utility–everyone knows beauty counts. As applications for retaining walls grow, creating more usable space for residential and commercial projects, builders and clients are demanding greater variety. Taking that into consideration, many manufacturers of segmental blocks have added variations to their products' shapes and colors. Blocks with textured rather than flat fronts add visual interest and look more like natural stone. Coloring blocks was a further move toward the natural, the unobtrusive. Certainly a reddish block would blend into a Georgia red clay hillside better than a gray block would.

Anchor Wall Systems of Minnetonka, MN, offers five block configurations–Windsor Stone, Diamond, Diamond Pro, Vertica, and Vertica Pro–that feature a textured face. The blocks are available in colors ranging from Buff (sandstone), Pewter (light gray), and Charcoal (darker gray) to (brick) Red and Terracotta. Local distributors can also match color samples to create a retaining wall block that blends in with a specific landscape or soil color.

Local distributors and manufacturers for Keystone Retaining Walls of Bloomington, MN, create the colors specified for each local region. Keystone's textured-face block line includes structural units (Standard, Compac, and Mini/Cap) and landscape units. The landscape line includes not only the beveled-face Garden Wall, Legacy Stone, and Sedona Stone, but also the chiseled-face Regal Stone and the Arbor Stone Planter, which, as the name suggests, will accommodate decorative plantings inside the block.

Grapevine, TX's Pavestone/HydroPave Ltd., which has a partnership with Anchor Wall Systems, also distributes the plantable Alpenstein Botanical Wall. Pavestone's own Rumbled Wall block creates an "old stone" wall that looks like it's been transplanted from the English countryside.

Is It Stone, or Is It Boulderscape?

Segmental retaining walls aren't the only ones concerned with appearances. Boulderscape of Capistrano Beach, CA, takes another step closer to nature in constructing soil nail walls, using a top-down construction to create a wall and facing it with shotcrete. The wall face is then sculpted to look like worn sandstone, fieldstone, or cracked granite. "We can also do shale, to a point," says Boulderscape's Steve Jimenez, "although that's very expensive."

The thickness of the shotcrete varies from 8 to about 24 in. thick, depending on the application. Because of this variance and the hand-crafted nature of the project, a Boulderscape retaining wall is more expensive than a concrete-block wall. Many of the company's projects involve creating natural-looking settings in zoos and at affluent residential sites.

"If you want lowest cost, go with the concrete blocks," Jimenez advises. "But even a cost-conscious customer like Caltrans [the California Department of Transportation] will use our product when looks count. In a city setting, Caltrans will use block walls. However, for hillsides, valleys, national parks, and the like, they will use us."
Boulderscape walls are often used on roadsides. Jimenez mentions projects on California's Route 101, on Route 92 near Half Moon Bay in San Francisco, and on Route 110 below Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. "Our wall under the Getty Center [in Los Angeles] is the Boulderscape ‘most viewed every day,'" he adds.

In keeping with the natural look, Boulderscape walls usually include vegetation as well. "Vegetation is planted at the wall bottom or top, or we can install planter pockets," Jimenez explains. "To create these planter pockets, before construction we'll install a 4-inch-diameter PVC pipe into the hillside, then build the retaining wall around that. The tubes are filled with a planting mix, and a drip line comes down the pipes. We use drought-tolerant plants or vines, such as creeping fig or ivy. We don't want to cover the entire wall–the plants are just for aesthetics."

Does vegetation limit the use or increase the cost of the wall? "Vegetation never takes away from a wall; it's always best to blend the wall in by covering parts of it with vegetation. That makes it look even more natural. The drainage needed for plants doesn't add cost, because all retaining walls have drainage behind them," Jimenez reports.

Concrete and Plants Do Mix

This 179-unit subdivision, completed in 1998, contains midslope walls up to 30 ft. high and 2:1 slopes above and below.

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Vegetation can also make a block retaining wall aesthetically pleasing. Many walls are topped with hanging or trailing plants, and manufacturers produce blocks that can contain plantings, such as Keystone's Arbor Stone Planter or Pavestone's Alpenstein Botanical Wall.

In creating its Verdura (named for VERDant green, and DURAble) "plantable" retaining walls, Soil Retention Products of Oceanside, CA, fully intended for its customers to use vegetation as an integral part of the retaining wall, whether the structure is a planter bed or a 60-ft.-high wall. "Does vegetation give our Verdura walls any limitations? I don't think so," believes Soil Retention Products's Dean Sandry. "Everyone would rather have a green, growing structure than more concrete. In our service area–southern California, Arizona, and Nevada–we can plant a wall of greenery year-round. We usually plant rosemary, ivy, or flowering vines in the walls. Soil and moisture is continuous in our wall; the cement's heat absorption doesn't dry the plants out."

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