Concrete vs. Block Retaining Walls: Which Is Better for Iowa?
When you need a retaining wall in Iowa, the material choice comes down to two main options: segmental concrete block or poured concrete. Both can hold back soil. Both can last a long time. But they work differently, cost differently, and suit different situations. If you are planning a retaining wall for your Cedar Falls property, understanding the difference between these two options is the key to getting a wall that performs well and fits your budget. Making the wrong choice can mean a wall that cracks, leans, or needs replacement long before it should.
Segmental concrete block is what we use for the majority of residential retaining walls in the Cedar Valley. These blocks are designed specifically for retaining soil. They have lips or pins that create an interlocking connection between courses, and they stack in a backward lean that uses gravity to hold the soil back. Because each block is an individual unit, the wall has some flexibility. When the ground heaves during freeze-thaw cycles, individual blocks can shift slightly without damaging the whole wall. That is a huge advantage in Iowa clay soils, where the ground moves more than people realize. A block wall built on a good base with proper drainage will settle and shift in small ways that do not hurt its performance.
Poured concrete retaining walls are built by forming and pouring concrete on site, reinforced with steel rebar. They create a monolithic structure that is incredibly strong. For very tall walls, typically over 8 feet, poured concrete is often the only practical option. Commercial projects and walls that need to support heavy loads are also better suited to poured concrete. But that strength comes with a trade-off. Poured concrete is rigid. When the ground moves during freeze-thaw, the wall has to either move with it or crack. In Iowa clay, which expands significantly when wet and frozen, cracking is common. Control joints and reinforcement help, but they do not eliminate the risk. A hairline crack in a poured wall is not necessarily a structural failure, but it does let water in, which makes things worse over time.
Cost and installation time also differ. A segmental block wall installs faster because there is no forming, no pouring, no waiting for concrete to cure. The blocks are delivered and stacked directly on a prepared base. That means lower labor costs and a faster timeline. Poured concrete requires form construction, rebar placement, concrete delivery and pouring, curing time, and form removal. It is a multi-step process that takes longer and costs more. For a typical residential wall in the 3-to-6-foot range, block is almost always the more economical choice. The cost difference can be significant for a standard backyard wall.
Appearance is another factor. Segmental block comes in a range of colors, textures, and shapes. You can choose a block that looks like natural stone, a smooth modern face, or a tumbled antique finish. The blocks have a finished appearance on both the face and the top cap. Poured concrete walls need additional finishing to look good. They can be stamped, stained, or covered with stone veneer, but those treatments add cost. A plain poured concrete wall looks utilitarian and may not fit the aesthetic of a residential yard. Most homeowners in Cedar Falls prefer the look of block because it blends naturally with the landscape.
The bottom line is that both materials work, but for different jobs. If you need a tall commercial-grade wall or a structural wall over 8 feet, poured concrete is the right call. For the vast majority of residential projects in the Cedar Valley, segmental block gives you the best balance of durability, appearance, value, and freeze-thaw performance. We have built hundreds of block walls across Cedar Falls and Waterloo, and they hold up. If you are not sure which option is right for your project, give us a call. We will walk your site and give you an honest recommendation based on what you need.