There is a flat ground level landscape area in the front yard. The shape is like a quarter of a cake with 2 straight lines and a curve line.
One straight line is along the front fence. Another straight line is along the dividing fence. The cured line side is along pathway and on the same ground level. I can walk freely on the landscape area to plant trees and water plants.
The landscape area is about 28 square meters in size with approx 10 meters adjacent the dividing fence.
I intend to add more soil which will raise the landscape area by about 20 - 30 cm in height above the natural ground. I will lay some landscape bricks along the curve line side so the soil will not spread to pathway. I will also be able to walk on the landscape to water the trees and plants.
The dividing fence is made of brick and in good condition.
Questions:
1. Can I pour soil directly and use the brick dividing fence as back wall for the slightly raised landscape area?
2. Do I need to build a retaining wall to protect the dividing fence?
3. Is there a limit on how high a landscape area can be raised without needing to build a retaining wall?
Thanks in advance for advice.