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Retaining Wall Contractors-Acadiana Region
Posted on 1/4/23 at 1:11 pm
Posted on 1/4/23 at 1:11 pm
Does anyone have experience with contractors who build retaining walls? I probably need two for my future landscaping. Ive talked to a few landscape companies who say they can do it but it seems like no one really specializes in them. And when they do mention retaining walls I can see the dollar signs adding up.
I don't think I need any piles or things like that driven in the ground. im not in a flood plain. I was thinking railroad ties or something like that as a solid foundation.
Ive dealt with some contractors lately who bite off more than they can chew and while the price was good the end result normally means I have to do it myself.
I would have engineered drawings from a civil firm more than likely but when I go to the Acadiana home builders website it leaves a little bit to be desired for contacts.
I don't think I need any piles or things like that driven in the ground. im not in a flood plain. I was thinking railroad ties or something like that as a solid foundation.
Ive dealt with some contractors lately who bite off more than they can chew and while the price was good the end result normally means I have to do it myself.
I would have engineered drawings from a civil firm more than likely but when I go to the Acadiana home builders website it leaves a little bit to be desired for contacts.
Posted on 1/4/23 at 9:04 pm to bayoutiger225
I built a 6' tall retaining wall in Baton Rouge. after interviewing a couple of contractors, I decided to do it myself. I wasn't convinced any of them really knew what they were doing and I knew they didn't have any real experience since BR is so flat.
I went with a keystone retaining wall block and followed or exceeded the design and build specs provided. 600 - 90lb blocks was no joke. The first course was the hardest. After that it wasn't too bad. It's all about the geogrid, drainage behind the wall, and compacting in small rises. Moved over 200 yards of material (river silt, brown clay, 3/4' limestone). Fun project that took me around two months to complete and another year to finish everything else - subsurface drainage, landscape, landscape lighting, sod, hardscape, etc.
I would advise against railroad ties. If you are going less than 2'-3' then it would be pretty simple. I have the Keystone PDF somewhere that I used as my instruction book.
I went with a keystone retaining wall block and followed or exceeded the design and build specs provided. 600 - 90lb blocks was no joke. The first course was the hardest. After that it wasn't too bad. It's all about the geogrid, drainage behind the wall, and compacting in small rises. Moved over 200 yards of material (river silt, brown clay, 3/4' limestone). Fun project that took me around two months to complete and another year to finish everything else - subsurface drainage, landscape, landscape lighting, sod, hardscape, etc.
I would advise against railroad ties. If you are going less than 2'-3' then it would be pretty simple. I have the Keystone PDF somewhere that I used as my instruction book.
Posted on 1/5/23 at 10:21 am to bayoutiger225
How tall and long are you looking to go?
Concrete or wood construction? (Big difference in cost )
Concrete or wood construction? (Big difference in cost )
Posted on 1/5/23 at 2:52 pm to jennyjones
Probably 6' at the tallest point and it would taper down to 3' or around there to go with the contours of the lot.
My wife is going to want concrete or maybe a brick type facade to keep it pretty for future landscaping I imagine.
My wife is going to want concrete or maybe a brick type facade to keep it pretty for future landscaping I imagine.
Posted on 1/5/23 at 4:35 pm to bayoutiger225
I used Concrete 70502 out of Carencro for some structural concrete retaining walls. (Poured concrete with rebar)
They do very good work but it’s not cheap for that type of wall
Might be overkill for what you are needing
If going wood, I’d recommend checking with Monster Timbers out of Opelousas for materials . LINK
They supply heavy duty pressure treated lumber used on bulkheads and underwater conditions . Their wood has 4x the CCA compared to yellow wood and other standard pressure treated wood. They ship all over the country
They might have some contacts that do that type of work that they could recommend
They do very good work but it’s not cheap for that type of wall
Might be overkill for what you are needing
If going wood, I’d recommend checking with Monster Timbers out of Opelousas for materials . LINK
They supply heavy duty pressure treated lumber used on bulkheads and underwater conditions . Their wood has 4x the CCA compared to yellow wood and other standard pressure treated wood. They ship all over the country
They might have some contacts that do that type of work that they could recommend
This post was edited on 1/5/23 at 4:42 pm
Posted on 1/5/23 at 4:45 pm to 310Laville
quote:
I went with a keystone retaining wall block and followed or exceeded the design and build specs provided. 600 - 90lb blocks was no joke. The first course was the hardest. After that it wasn't too bad. It's all about the geogrid, drainage behind the wall, and compacting in small rises. Moved over 200 yards of material (river silt, brown clay, 3/4' limestone). Fun project that took me around two months to complete and another year to finish everything else - subsurface drainage, landscape, landscape lighting, sod, hardscape, etc.
This is very good information if doing a block wall. Drainage is super important
Posted on 1/5/23 at 5:23 pm to bayoutiger225
Below is a link to what I used. The Compact Straight Series II Block. 80' of wall 6' tall with a 7' radius semicircle step out the front cost around $6,000 in blocks. Probably spent a total of $20K on the wall including equipment rentals, soil, rocks, drainage, etc. On the drainage, don't use black corrugated pipe. Use Minimum of 4" perforated drain pipe.
LINK
The link below is to the Keystone construction manual that I used.
LINK
LINK
The link below is to the Keystone construction manual that I used.
LINK
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