🔊 How To Build & Pour Concrete Retaining Wall After Hillside Slide

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How To Build & Pour A Concrete Retaining Wall: Here we going to show you how we go about building a concrete retaining wall after a hillside slide. From start to finish

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How to build a concrete retaining wall on hillside
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How To Build & Pour A Concrete Retaining Wall: Here we going to show you how we go about building a concrete retaining wall after a hillside slide. From start to finish

AllAccessConstruction
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Keep up the great work man. That is a well built retaining wall for sure!

BYOTools
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*_Wow... this brings back memories... did a 10 foot x 100 foot wall in Seattle..._*

Client needed a large level area for a tennis court. Seattle is more hills than level. Every job requires grading, drainage, and some sort of slope retaining. No site access from client property, but neighbors allowed access across their property. Saved us from having to wheelbarrow 100 yard of concrete hundreds of feet from street.

I've been watching you guys for a while... always impressed with your willingness to do it right rather than cut corners. Steel and Concrete work together when done right. Nothing worse than getting big cracks, requiring jack hammers to remove, and doing it all over.

*_Your videos are easy going, informative, and understood. Great Job AGAIN._*

SJR_Media_Group
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this is so helpful to me i have a house in Trinidad and Tobago and i have to do exactly what you showed in this video i will be doing the work myself i have watched this about 50 times taking notes

carollopez
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Yeah man 2x12s have been insane! Your videos have helped me though, appreciate you putting that content out!

ryanhenak
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well built, beautiful wood plank finish.

fredjohnson
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Most professional job I have ever seen.

helenstagg
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Awesome looking retaining wall, great job all around.

tedfisher
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Very nice wall board formed poured in place nice structural work solid team👍

sunracer
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Thank you! thats a very useful video. its helping me with a wall i am planning in the Algarve, Portugal. I will follow your videos. very nice professional work.

nathanandkimredfearn
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Awesome :) thank you for the tips! keeping it positive!!

MikeMartinMaine
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Man you are legit! Just found your channel. I've never seen cross ties that you can use on 2×12 like that. I'm definitely going to be trying to find those. That opens up a whole new aspect of concrete construction without having to buy forms. Plus using lumber you can customize the walls easier. Thanks again!

zackm
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ive been watching so many videos of building retaiming wall amd let me say this is the only retaining wall i have condfidance in, excellant work i wouldve loved to see how the draining behind the wall was approached

dlb
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Fire build bro. Excellent narration too.

landscapes
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Wish you were in my area. Looking to build a retailing wall, watched your video and thought "why" just get these guys. Your positivity is compelling.

robertvirgin
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That's some professionnal work! I love DIY projects but sometimes it need a crew with experience to make sure the job is made right!!

SEBTECHDIY
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Put in the drain pipe at the bottom in the back with #57 stone, wait 10 days to back fill and done. Great details. You also correctly placed the steel mat on the back side of the wall about 2" from the form. Our engineering firm is picky'. My opinion is, That is a well done retaining wall.

michaelbeck
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Music made the video great! Also, seeing guys hand-toss large rocks into a truck next to a machine reminds me of the military.

MOB-Lee
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Thank you, Very informative. Found it looking for poor in place septic tank and think the info will apply.

McDIY
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Awesome content, i see you often reply to the comments so here i go with a couple questions: where i live i see the concrete workers using large plates instead of planks for the formwork, and heavy duty steel tiebacks that run through plastic pipe so that they don't get trapped into the concrete and can be removed easily afterwards. Is this a technique used exclusively for very large retaining walls ? Other question is about the ethernal conflict between people who design and approve blueprints, and people who turn them into practice. I'm a proud trench guy and hauler/loader operator, been recently to a course to expand my knowledge and i was delighted by the amount of rather complex things that were included, like geology notions, calculations for strenght requirement of water lines' anchor points, dimensioning of ground water drainage systems and the likes. I loved it, but couldn't keep myself from asking the teacher how all this wouldn't be the engineers' job. He said 'Yes, this is engineer's work and it's supposed to be all calculated and drawn correctly before being handed over to you. But it's your duty and your right, as a competent worker, to raise your hand and point out something that cleraly doesn't sound right and might have slipped through during the design phase. One day you might be the guy who makes the difference between the place being flooded within months, and residents enjoying their new homes for a very long time as supposed to be'. Now i wonder if being that guy might get you a raise or even just a clap on the shoulder, or perhaps get you fired for being nosy 😁 Sorry for the long post and thanks in advance

notectrl