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Hardscaping·

Step Retaining Walls for Terraced Gardens in Iowa

If you have a sloped yard in Cedar Falls, you know the frustration of looking at a hill that you cannot really use. You mow it because you have to, but it is awkward and the mower feels like it is going to tip over. The grass never looks as good as the flat parts of the yard. Erosion washes soil down to the bottom every time it rains. A tiered retaining wall system, also called step walls or terraced walls, turns that problem slope into something useful. Instead of one steep hill, you get two or three flat levels that each serve a purpose. The walls hold the soil in place, stop erosion, and create usable space where there was none before.

The key to a successful stepped wall system is drainage. Water moves downhill, and when you build multiple walls on a slope, that water has to go somewhere. If it builds up behind any of the walls, the hydrostatic pressure can push the wall over. Each tier needs its own drainage system. That means gravel backfill behind every wall, perforated drain pipe at the base of each wall, and outlets that carry the water safely down to the bottom of the slope. The drainage for upper tiers has to pass through or around the lower walls without putting pressure on them. It is a system that has to be designed as a whole, not as individual walls stacked one on top of another. We design the drainage for the entire slope, not just each wall individually.

Each tier in a stepped wall system can serve a different purpose. The uppermost level might be a vegetable garden, getting full sun and staying above the frost pockets that settle in low areas. The middle tier could be flower beds with perennials and ornamental grasses that soften the look of the walls. The lowest level, closest to the house or patio, is the prime spot for a seating area, a fire pit, or an extension of an existing patio. Having multiple levels gives you the chance to create distinct zones in your yard that feel separate but connected. You can move from the vegetable garden down to the flower beds and then to the patio, and each transition feels intentional.

Planting on terraced levels has advantages over planting on a slope. Each flat level holds water and nutrients better than a sloped surface where everything runs off. The soil stays in place, the plants get the water you give them, and you can actually walk on the level areas to weed and tend the garden. On a slope, every bit of rain runs downhill, carrying soil and fertilizer with it. On a terrace, the water soaks in where it falls. That makes a real difference for vegetable gardens and flower beds during the dry stretches of Iowa summer.

Material choice for stepped walls is the same as for single retaining walls. Segmental concrete block is the best option for most residential projects because it handles freeze-thaw well, installs faster than natural stone, and costs less. The blocks interlock and stack with a backward lean that creates a gravity-held structure. For a stepped wall system, the block units also allow for drainage to pass through the wall joints, which reduces the pressure on the walls. Natural stone is an option for a premium look, but it takes longer to install and requires more careful engineering for the multi-wall drainage.

Step retaining walls are not a DIY project. They require understanding soil mechanics, drainage engineering, and proper construction sequencing. You cannot build the bottom wall, fill behind it, and then build the top wall without accounting for how the weight of the upper wall and soil loads the lower wall. The whole system has to be designed together. We have built stepped retaining walls for homeowners across Cedar Falls and the Cedar Valley. If you have a slope on your property that you want to turn into usable space, give us a call. We will walk the site, talk through how you want to use each level, and design a stepped wall system that gives you the yard you have been wanting.

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