How to Build a Retaining Wall
Overview:
Retaining walls have been around for thousands of years and are
basically used to hold back the earth. Retaining walls hold back the
earth in areas where there are steep
inclines. In ancient cultures retaining walls were widely used to
make terrace gardens in mountainous terrain so agricultural crops
could be grown.
Retaining walls are still used today in modern construction
along driveways, landscaping lawns and backyards. In the old days
they were made of stacked stones but in modern construction they are
made primarily from landscape bricks (blocks), timber, and concrete.
A timber retaining wall or a landscape timber retaining wall is the
least effective as the timber rots after approximately ten years.
Stone and brick retaining walls will last for decades if they are
constructed correctly and a masonry retaining wall will last for a
century.

The challenge of how to build a retaining wall is to build them so
they will withstand the side load of the earth behind them without
tumbling down. In a cold
climate you must consider the effects of frost in the soil that will
cause the earth to expand causing the wall to fail. The soil that
you are trying to hold back is being pulled towards the center of
the earth by the forces of gravity in addition to the force of the
down slope, lateral load component. The retaining must be strong
enough to offset the pushing force of the soil behind it from frost
and the down slope component. The higher the wall the greater the
stress is from the earth behind it. It is best to limit the height
of the wall to three to four feet to avoid wall failure.
The retaining wall base must be set solid
soil. Dig a trench about two feet deep along the track of the wall.
If you intend to build a poured concrete wall in a cold climate
region the base of the wall should be below the frost line, about
three to four feet from the surface. A poured concrete wall should
be at least ten inches thick with reinforcing bars placed in the
wall. For landscape terrace walls, build of landscape blocks that
are less than three feet tall, the footing under the wall does not
have to be as deep but it should be comprised of solid soil such as
compacted gravel.
See:
Building a Stonewall