The invention pertains to retaining walls made of sandbags and to interconnecting members for attaching together sandbags in such walls.
Retaining walls are used in a wide variety of civil engineering and landscaping applications, for example to support slopes and embankments for highways, support noise barriers, prevent erosion along waterways, etc. Retaining walls are commonly made having a support face structure made of interconnecting blocks with soil or other fill material placed and compacted in back of the wall, and sometimes with sheets of geogrid laid in the fill at various levels, extending back from the wall and attached to it.
International Patent Publication No. WO 00/61880 (Kim), published Oct. 19, 2000, discloses a system of building retaining walls from sandbags which uses interconnecting members to attach the sandbags in adjacent courses to each other so as to stabilize and strengthen the sandbag wall structure, permitting the construction of permanent retaining walls. Sandbag retaining walls have several advantages over prior art systems in those applications where they can be used, including lower cost, ease of construction and the ability to make vegetation-covered walls from seeds in the sandbag fill material.
It would be desirable to extend the utility and application of sandbag retaining walls by providing further means to enhance the strength, stability and use of such structures.
The invention provides sandbag interconnecting members for connecting sandbags in a retaining wall. According to one embodiment of the invention, the sandbag interconnecting member comprises a generally planar body having at least three projections on its upper side and on its lower side, the projections being capable of protruding into sandbags, the interconnecting member being sized such that two or more interconnecting members can fit in spaced-apart positions on the upper or lower side of a sandbag in a course of sandbags in a retaining wall.
The invention further provides a sandbag interconnecting member which comprises a piece of material, for example plastic or fabric, having an upper side and a lower side, both of which can form a detachable bond to a sandbag. The surfaces of the interconnecting member, and the wall of the sandbag or a portion thereof, comprise mating parts of a hook-and-loop fastener device (as Velcro) or a similar attachment means. Alternately, a plurality of loose hooks can be applied between a sandbag interconnecting member and the sandbags, or simply between the sandbags themselves. In the latter case, the mass of loose hooks acts as a sandbag interconnecting member.
The invention further provides retaining walls comprising two or more courses of sandbags in which vertically-adjacent courses are attached together by means of the sandbag interconnecting members of the invention.
Exemplary embodiments are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. It is intended that the embodiments and figures disclosed herein are to be considered illustrative rather than restrictive.
In the following description and in the drawings, corresponding and like parts are referred to by the same reference characters.
Referring to
The sandbag interconnecting members are placed in spaced-apart positions on the upper side of the sandbags 26. Two sandbag interconnecting members 10 are placed on each sandbag 26 in the lower course 30, in spaced-apart positions, preferably between the mid-line and the ends 28 of the bag. One or two sandbag interconnecting members may also be placed under each sandbag in the lower course 30, to better secure the wall 36 to the ground on which it is constructed. The sandbags 26 are positioned so that their ends 28 abut each other in the course 30. As seen in
When the upper course 32 of sandbags is placed on top of the lower course 30 and on the interconnecting members 10 positioned thereon, the projections 14 on the upper side of the sandbag interconnecting member protrude into the sandbags in the upper course, and the weight of such sandbags presses the interconnecting members so that the projections 18 on their lower side protrude into the sandbags of the lower course 30. The projections 14, 18 can be configured to penetrate the sandbags, or, preferably, to simply indent them. In either case, the projections are considered to “protrude” into the sandbags. This attaches together the sandbags in the upper course to those in the lower course. The interconnecting members 10 do not extend across the point of abutment of adjacent sandbags within a given course.
The courses of the retaining wall structure typically lie generally horizontally, though they may follow the contour of the ground as required. The courses 30, 32 of the wall are laid one above the other, including further courses laid in the same manner to build a wall of the required height. The slope of the resulting wall face of sandbags may vary from a gradual slope to a substantially vertical one, depending on the particular application. The courses 30, 32 of the wall face are “vertically-adjacent” in the sense that they are generally one above the other, so as to form a wall having a height, though not necessarily, or typically, forming a vertical wall, as a wall having some slope is generally preferred.
According to a further embodiment, illustrated in
In a further embodiment, shown in
The sandbags 26 are placed in adjacent courses in the retaining wall 36 so that the interconnecting members 40 attach the sandbags in adjacent courses together. The sandbag interconnecting members 40 may be in the form of strips that are oriented laterally across the face of the sandbag, i.e. perpendicular to the wall face 42, in order to provide the greatest resistance to movement from the pressure of the backfill 38 supported by the wall.
However, different shapes, such as square or circular, or different orientations, of the sandbag interconnecting member may also be used.
Although the invention has been described in terms of various embodiments, it is not intended that the invention be limited to these embodiments. Various modifications within the scope of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art. The scope of the invention is defined by the claims that follows:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2572008 | Dec 2006 | CA | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CA07/02358 | 12/21/2007 | WO | 00 | 1/4/2010 |