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- 25 Mar 2024
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Hello. First post from me as I really need some wise words please.
We had a bloke come and replace our knackered brick garden walls with some 'treated' sleepers some years back which looked lovely. Needless to say they all rotted out within a few years and I want to do something myself or get a chap in. We get quite a bit of moisture from the slope/field above seeping down and through the greensand so I need something more resilient.
The existing blocks you can see have movement when I boot them so they need to come out to. I also want to make the 90 degree turn a bit wider in case I ever want to get a digger to the rear of the house or get a wheelchair round there. This photo is from the level rear of the house - which is up a double flight of concrete steps anyway - we are built into a hillside (this will be post #3)
The red arrow marks an 11kV power cable (which was sitting just behind the sleepers). It then wiggles underground up to the nice pole in our garden. Ignore this for now as I'm sure I can just brick it over. There are concrete footings already in place. Not sure of dimensions yet.
As the wall is less than 1m high at its tallest bit - as shown. I think a double thickness of brick or laid-flat block is going to be OK? Given the amount of moisture seeping through I assume engineering brick or F2/S2 brick is going to be preferable to concrete block as less permeable? Is that right? I also assume I should put some gravel etc behind the bricks/blocks to reduce hydrostatic pressure?
I don't want to render or coat them on the face as experience shows the frost (we are in frost shadow) just rips anything apart. I have at least 2 other posts to ask about along these lines!
Thank you in advance, Paul
me wise words please
We had a bloke come and replace our knackered brick garden walls with some 'treated' sleepers some years back which looked lovely. Needless to say they all rotted out within a few years and I want to do something myself or get a chap in. We get quite a bit of moisture from the slope/field above seeping down and through the greensand so I need something more resilient.
The existing blocks you can see have movement when I boot them so they need to come out to. I also want to make the 90 degree turn a bit wider in case I ever want to get a digger to the rear of the house or get a wheelchair round there. This photo is from the level rear of the house - which is up a double flight of concrete steps anyway - we are built into a hillside (this will be post #3)
The red arrow marks an 11kV power cable (which was sitting just behind the sleepers). It then wiggles underground up to the nice pole in our garden. Ignore this for now as I'm sure I can just brick it over. There are concrete footings already in place. Not sure of dimensions yet.
As the wall is less than 1m high at its tallest bit - as shown. I think a double thickness of brick or laid-flat block is going to be OK? Given the amount of moisture seeping through I assume engineering brick or F2/S2 brick is going to be preferable to concrete block as less permeable? Is that right? I also assume I should put some gravel etc behind the bricks/blocks to reduce hydrostatic pressure?
I don't want to render or coat them on the face as experience shows the frost (we are in frost shadow) just rips anything apart. I have at least 2 other posts to ask about along these lines!
Thank you in advance, Paul
me wise words please