If you are considering the idea of building a retaining wall in your outdoor living space, you may want to consider installing a dry stone wall. A dry stone wall requires slightly more skill to build because it utilizes no mortar and the stones must fit together like puzzle pieces in order prevent the wall from folding. However, the reason that many homeowners opt for a dry stone wall rather than a mortared wall is that they are less likely to collapse, since it will allows water to flow through it more freely and therefore can withstand a higher amount of hydraulic pressure. A dry stone wall can prove to be a better option than a wall that uses mortar because it is less susceptible to weather damage and deterioration.
Many people also prefer the look of a dry stone wall because it mimics the style of the rock walls left over from the farms of early settlers.
Do you think that you have enough skill to build your own dry stone wall? Read the following article from Southern Mulch that outlines the steps, materials, and terms needed to build a strong dry stone wall. This will help you determine if building a dry stone wall is the sort of project that you would like to undertake.
DIY – How to build a dry stone wall
Dry stone retaining walls add beauty and enhance the value of your property as well as retain slopes to add usable level ground. The design and construction of dry stone walls are projects that can be undertaken by most homeowners with great success.
Wall construction tips
When designing any wall, it always helps to position the wall in the middle of the slope. This gives an equal amount of soil removed that will be needed as backfill. On uneven grades, the contour should be taken from the bottom of the wall while all courses are laid flat creating a wall of varying heights with a level top. All dry stone walls should be constructed with the thickness equal to half of the overall height. Walls should be built leaning back toward the slope about two inches per foot of height for stability. For walls that exceed two and one half feet in height, the use of bonding stones and a drainage system are necessary for long-term stability. Bonding stones stabilize a wall, and connect it to the slope that is being retained. Drainage behind any retaining wall of size is critical. Hydraulic pressure is responsible for the failure of most walls. To incorporate a drainage system in your wall, leave a twelve-inch wide space behind the wall and lay a four inch perforated drainpipe on the bottom and backfill with clean aggregate. Separate the drainage system from the slope with a layer of landscape fabric, this stops soil intrusion. The drainpipe can be directed to a lower area away from the wall reducing the chances of erosion.For dry stone walls that will not exceed two and one half feet in height, elaborate drain systems are not necessary, although landscape fabric is still necessary to stop soil on the slope from washing through the wall creating erosion above and behind the wall. Bonding stones should still be used for structural integrity.
Tools you will need
Shovel, small sledgehammer, string and string level, stakes to hold string, hand tamper, safety glasses, tape measure and a builders level.
Materials you will need
For walls less than two and one half feet tall: Stone and landscape fabric. For walls more than two and one half feet tall: Add aggregate and four-inch drain pipe.
Terms to know
Base stones: The broadest and thickest stones used to make the first course or the foundation of a dry stone wall.
Bonding stones: Longer stones turned to run from the front face of a wall through the wall and protrude out the back of the wall into the backfill material. These stones add structural as well as lateral strength to a wall.
Course: A continuous horizontal layer of stone that maintains a constant level height.
Hydraulic pressure: The lateral force created by water when its natural flow is slowed or stopped.
Cap stone: Uniform sized stones used as the top course on a wall.
Shim stone: A small and/or thin stone used to level and stabilize other stones in a wall.
Calculate Materials Needed
Stone: Determine the length, width and height of the wall in feet. Average the width and the height if they are not consistent. Multiply the length x width x height to get the cubic footage. There are about 15 cubic feet in one ton of stone so divide the cubic footage of your wall by 15 to determine the quantity of stone needed in tons. EXAMPLE: A 20′ long wall that is 2′ tall needs to be 1′ wide.20′ x 1′ x 2′ = 40 cubic feet40 divided by 15 = 2.67 tons
Landscape fabric: Take the height of the wall and add 1.5 feet then multiply by the length of the wall to attain square footage. EXAMPLE: 20′(2′ +1.5′) = 70 square feet. Note: For walls more than 2.5 feet tall add 3.5 feet to the height when figuring landscape fabric width. This allows enough fabric to encapsulate the drainage aggregate.
Drainage aggregate: Assuming a 12″ wide drainage system. Multiply the length of the wall by the width of the drainage aggregate by the height of the wall to get the cubic footage. There are 27 cubic feet in one cubic yard so divide the cubic footage by 27 to get the quantity of cubic yards of drainage aggregate needed. EXAMPLE: 20′ x 1′ x 2′ = 40 cubic feet40 divided by 27 = 1.5 cubic yards
Drainpipe: The length of the drain system behind the wall for perforated pipe and the distance to the drain area in solid drainpipe if draining elsewhere.
Backfill material: Multiply the length x width x depth of the area to be filled to attain the cubic footage. Divide the cubic footage by 27 to get the quantity of cubic yards needed. Note: Soils will compact up to around 20 percent so a little extra may be necessary.
Getting started
- Dig a level bottom trench wide enough for the base stones to fit into and about the same depth, as they are thick, then compact the bottom with a hand tamper.
- Set stakes outside of the wall ends so a string can be tied on and leveled with a string level above the walls maximum height.
- Lay landscape fabric covering one half of the base trench and extending back toward the slope.
- Determine the lowest point of the trench by measuring down from the string.
- Pick out the base stones and begin laying at the lowest point of the trench in both directions covering the landscape fabric to hold it in place. The base course must be level and firmly installed so use shim stones to help fill in voids and level individual stones as needed. If shim and filler stones are in short supply, break up some whole stones with a sledgehammer. We are definitely not building a piano here. The correct attitude for building a dry stone wall is “If you can’t force it, break it. If you can’t break it, your hammer is most definitely too small!
- If the base course fades below the intended grade too far, go back to where you started and begin the next course. Overlap the joints that are between the stones below, and span the width of the wall with bonding stones as often as possible. Continue this process until the base course is complete.
- Each course of stone should be stepping back slightly to achieve a two-inch per foot lean back toward the slope. This helps the wall retain the slope. Use a builders level and tape measure to check your step back.
- While stacking the courses, lay the landscape fabric tight up against the back of the wall and install and compact the backfill as you go. For larger walls add the drainage aggregate, the pipe, and the backfill as you go while keeping the aggregate separated from the backfill with the landscape fabric.
- For walls more than two and one half feet tall, install bonding stones every 18″ of height about four to six feet apart.
- Uniform thickness stones should be saved for the cap course.
- Level the wall before installing the cap course and lap the landscape fabric over the top of the wall, then trim off excess until it covers half of the top of the wall.
- Install the cap course tightly to hold down and hide the landscape fabric. If the wall will be in a public area, or will be used as a sitting wall, the cap course should be mortared down or glued down with a construction adhesive suitable for masonry.
When building your dry stone wall, make sure that the foundation extends below the frost line if you live in an area that tends to become particularly cold in the winter. This will help prevent your dry stone wall from collapsing. It is also important to install the correct method of drainage in order to ensure that hydraulic pressure does not cause the dry stone wall to fail.
If you are ready to build a natural stone wall, please contact Camosse Masonry Supply. We carry natural and palletized stone that will prove to be the precise materials necessary for your dry stone wall. We are also masonry experts, so we would be happy to answer any of the questions that you may have about building your own dry stone wall.