My retainer wall is caving in, what can I do to repair?
The city street is caving in causing my retainer wall to come down. They put a 2x4 on my property to protect there side walk and there side wall is lifting. I was told that the soil is moving under the city street. I’m confused on what to do.
Related Discussions
How to get rid of mice?
We seem to have some unwelcome Mickeys and Minnies in our house. What is the best way to get rid of them?
How to remove popcorn ceiling with asbestos?
I want to remove my popcorn ceiling, but it has asbestos in it. How do I go about this safely?
How to caulk baseboard gaps?
How do I fill gaps at baseboard, should I caulk? If so, does anyone know how to caulk baseboards?
How to fix squeaky hardwood floors?
How do I fix squeaky hardwood floors?
Maybe call ur home insurance company!?
https://www.bobvila.com/articles/retaining-wall-repair/
https://finance.zacks.com/homeowners-insurance-cover-repair-retaining-wall-9570.html
https://www.diynetwork.com/how-to/topics/retaining-walls
https://www.wikihow.com/Build-a-Retaining-Wall
https://www.biggerpockets.com/forums/67/topics/116643-retaining-wall-failingpicture-incl
Those are steel beams that were put 4 feet in the ground with drainage and it still caved in then the city said if the wood isn’t moved they will fine me. The soil is moving so much until the steel beams are bending.
I'm confused. This looks like a retaining fence to me, not a wall. And it looks like a public safety issue.
I have never had such an experience as yours, but, given that if that all falls down on your house people could be injured or die, I'd be making calls to lawyers and public safety people, local govt., state and federal govt. and calling newspapers and tv stations for coverage.
If the whole lot collapses, you will have established a foundation on which to sue everybody in sight. Your local governing board needs to know about this, then up the food chain.
What state/city are you located in?
How did you get a mortgage with this--what to me looks like inadequate protection in place?
Here's hoping Betty's links are helpful.
I would consult a lawyer NOW. Usually they'll do a short consult for free. You have an easement with the city and deeds require that each party keep up their share so that no property or people are damaged. That said, you may need to have a proper retaining wall installed. The steel beams are too far apart and wood will not hold with that kind of pressure. (Think retaining walls on the sides of a highway.) You'll need a professional company to do this for you. With any luck, the municipality will either give you free permits or something. Acts of nature aside, they didn't build their street with a proper foundation. The burden should not fall completely on you.
It is a city problem you should contact them!
Call your Buildings Insurance Company, Subsidence!! Sue the City for damage to your property!