Kodthree
Member
Friends,
I need advise, guidance, and tips and tricks on a project in the "just thinkin' 'bout it" stage right now. Here is a picture of the project area:

Our lodge is built on the man-made dike of our lake, and about thirty feet back from the water. Our problem is that the dike slopes steeply away from the front of the structure to the water's edge, and as such is quite difficult to use and/or drive on most of the year. The excavated material from the lake forms the dike, and is clay, so it gets slippery and soft with rain or melted snow.
The general idea of this project is to create an arc'd retaining wall with its top level being at or slightly lower than the foundation of the lodge. The radius of the arc would be centered with the peak of the roofline. I think some stone or brick steps leading down to the water and possibly a floating dock projecting out from the area in front of the deck on the right side of the picture would be desireable, too. We intend to extend the driveway (with geo fabric, 3", and 3/4 minus) from the left of the picture to past the lodge on the right, adjacent to the structure, so it will be more accessible at all times, and we will cover the remainder of the back-filled area with grass to make a front yard, including a firepit area.
My questions are:
1: What is the cheapest and easiest material to use for a retaining wall (large rocks, basalt columns, gabiens, driven posts with treated timbers forming the wall, etc.)?
2: Drainage considerations?
3: Can a guy (that's me in this story) simply excavate a flat shelf along the intended area of the retaining wall, set the materials (rock, gabiens, or whatever) on that shelf or step and then just backfill, or is some kind of anchor used? To be clear, once constructed, nothing heavier than about 10 people will be anywhere near the edge of the retaining wall...it will not be driven on in that area at all.
Please feel free to chime in with any thoughts or tips you might have. I can include more pictures to help visualize, too. And, we'd like to do this in house as much as possible. I'm sure we'll rent an excavator for a lot of the work, but think we'll also need a rolling compactor over the back filled areas.
Thanks,
Kodthree
I need advise, guidance, and tips and tricks on a project in the "just thinkin' 'bout it" stage right now. Here is a picture of the project area:

Our lodge is built on the man-made dike of our lake, and about thirty feet back from the water. Our problem is that the dike slopes steeply away from the front of the structure to the water's edge, and as such is quite difficult to use and/or drive on most of the year. The excavated material from the lake forms the dike, and is clay, so it gets slippery and soft with rain or melted snow.
The general idea of this project is to create an arc'd retaining wall with its top level being at or slightly lower than the foundation of the lodge. The radius of the arc would be centered with the peak of the roofline. I think some stone or brick steps leading down to the water and possibly a floating dock projecting out from the area in front of the deck on the right side of the picture would be desireable, too. We intend to extend the driveway (with geo fabric, 3", and 3/4 minus) from the left of the picture to past the lodge on the right, adjacent to the structure, so it will be more accessible at all times, and we will cover the remainder of the back-filled area with grass to make a front yard, including a firepit area.
My questions are:
1: What is the cheapest and easiest material to use for a retaining wall (large rocks, basalt columns, gabiens, driven posts with treated timbers forming the wall, etc.)?
2: Drainage considerations?
3: Can a guy (that's me in this story) simply excavate a flat shelf along the intended area of the retaining wall, set the materials (rock, gabiens, or whatever) on that shelf or step and then just backfill, or is some kind of anchor used? To be clear, once constructed, nothing heavier than about 10 people will be anywhere near the edge of the retaining wall...it will not be driven on in that area at all.
Please feel free to chime in with any thoughts or tips you might have. I can include more pictures to help visualize, too. And, we'd like to do this in house as much as possible. I'm sure we'll rent an excavator for a lot of the work, but think we'll also need a rolling compactor over the back filled areas.
Thanks,
Kodthree