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Hi, i have a retaining wall, thats more of a plantar box, that i need to build in front of my deck. Its 600mm high by about 5.4m long, and will be 1m wide. I would like to cover the treated pine sleepers with spotted gum decking, and wondering if this is ok to just screw the decking boards onto the uprights? Was going to use 200 x 75mm TP sleepers as uprights.
Secondly, is it also possible to use stacked stone veneer on a TP sleeper wall? If i put up some thick cement sheet between the uprights, will it be ok to glue the stacked stone to this, or is a TP sleeper wall to unreliable to to this method?
The sleepers would be on one side of the uprights, and the sheeting on the otherside, so not directly touching.
Hope that makes sense!
@Adam_W, @pete_brig, @Yorky88, @LePallet
Are you able to provide any assistance to @Crash76?
Thanks heaps,
Jason
Hi @Jason, not my area of expertise (I'm just a "Jack of all trades") but here's some comments about the retaining wall itself (@Crash76 might've already thought of some):
If it's a true planter box (i.e free standing with sleepers on all sides) TP should be OK.
If it's more of a retaining wall (ie sleepers at front & ends with the back being the natural land/fill) then:
Maybe check out @Adam_W 's "How-to-build-a-retaining-wall" and/or get some input from more seasoned amateur or a "pro" if the above guide isn't sufficient (e.g. @Adam_W ).
W.r.t. the decking cladding, it would need appropriate intermediate support depending on the span ie less than 2400mm
Cheers
Hi @Crash76 , yes, it's actually pretty easy to cover-up a basic timber retaining wall. It's all about getting the right spans between fixing or adding the right substrate.
One of my early YouTube videos I show how to clad a retaining style raised garden bed. This just uses blueboard painted with texture-finish paint.
The photo I've included is a pond & board-walk I built where I created a stable substrate and then applied stackstone. I used two techniques with this project. One was blueboard the other was horizontal sleepers (hard to explain without showing all the images but had to do with the pond structure.)
Thanks for the info guys.
That video is great, really helpful!
I've realised i have a heap of hardwood sleepers (ironbark) which i can use, so will be using them instead of TP. Will 2.4m centres be too far or is that ok? It won't be holding any load bearing soil, literally just a garden bed.
With the 2.4 distance between uprights, i will put in blocking between at 600mm intervals to take the cladding or blueboard, depending on which way i go.
Thanks again for the help!
Hi @Crash76 , no worries.
Just to make it easier, think of the uprights as posts and we'll call the horizontals beams.
To prevent bowing over time, even in non-load bearing walls, 3 evenly spaces posts are always used. If your beam is 2.4 then the centre of post 1 would be at zero, post two at 1.2, post 3 at 2.4 if the wall is continuous.
This would obviously be modified to suit your situation. (see diagram I just quickly drew up, note there's no scale to this)
In your case you'd then want blocking too as I'd say that 1.2 is too great a span for blueboard.
Hi @Adam_W ,
This is fantastic work and the video helped a lot in understanding things. I was just wondering if you have another video for the above pic, to demonstrate how you installed stone veneer on the sleeper surface? I have a sleeper retaining wall but not sure if I can cover it up with stone veneer. if not what's can you suggest as an alternative to it?
Basicalling my aim is to cover the gap between the 2 sleepers.
If stone isn't possible I bending towards using the plastic ones, but I'm not too keen as it's 'plastic'.
Cheers,
Hi @sumitpramanik my pleasure & glad it was helpful.
The best way is to add a more stable substrate - surface below the final finish.
What I'd do with that wall is to cover it with blueboard, or another suitable exterior type board, it can be screwed & glued on. Then apply the veneer over that with a suitable adhesive.
You'd probably want to remove & replace the capping/coping on the wall as it will need to be a bit wider.
When you put the board on you also want to bridge over the existing joins to add strength & reduce movement. (see very rough diagram below)
Wonderful to see that @Adam_W's video and advice has been helpful @sumitpramanik.
We'd love to follow along with your project, so feel free to hit Start a discussion to share an update or ask a question.
Stevie
Thank you @Adam_W , yes I've understood. Will give it a try and see how I go.. I'll share the pics once I have done it.
Cheers
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