Claims
- 1. A retaining wall system for stabilizing an earthen wall, comprising:
- at least one wall panel for engaging a face of the earthen wall;
- anchor mesh buried within the earthen wall, the anchor mesh comprising an anchor bearing bar and a plurality of anchor bars each having proximal end, where the anchor bars are bent to define a loop portion and the anchor bearing bar is rigidly attached to the anchor bars between the loop portions and the proximal ends of the anchor bars; and
- a locking pin inserted into the loop portion of the anchor mesh;
- the anchor mesh being arranged to extend through a void in the wall panel such that the locking pin engages the loop portion of the anchor mesh and at least a portion of the wall panel is located between the locking pin and the anchor bearing bar;
- the anchor bearing bar being attached to the anchor bars such that the anchor bearing bar is initially spaced from a back surface on the wall panel a predetermined distance where the predetermined distance is predetermined to facilitate assembly of the retaining wall system and, when loads are applied on the wall panel, the loop portion of the anchor mesh deforms to allow the anchor bearing bar to engage the back surface of the wall panel to maintain a position of the wall panel relative to the anchor mesh and thereby stabilize at least a portion of the earthen wall.
- 2. A system as recited in claim 1, in which the anchor bearing bar is attached to the anchor bar such that a distance between the anchor bearing bar and a portion of the anchor bars that engages the locking pin is predetermined to allow the locking pin to be inserted through the loop portions during assembly of the retaining wall system and to decrease by a controlled amount due to forces introduced on the wall panels during the process of creating the earthen wall.
- 3. A system as recited in claim 1, in which:
- the wall panel is a concrete member having a connecting void network formed therein; and
- the loop portion of the anchor mesh and the locking pin extend at least partly into the connecting void network.
- 4. A system as recited in claim 3, in which the connecting void network comprises:
- a plurality of mesh voids; and
- a pin void in communication with the mesh voids, wherein the locking pin extends through the pin void and the mesh voids.
- 5. A system as recited in claim 3, in which:
- the locking pin comprises first and second locking pin sections; and
- the connecting void network comprises first and second pin windows; wherein
- the pin windows of adjacent wall panels align to allow the first locking pin section to be inserted into the pin void through the first pin window and the second locking pin section to be inserted into the pin void through the second pin window.
- 6. A system as recited in claim 4, in which:
- the locking pin comprises first and second locking pin sections; and
- the connecting void network further comprises first and second pin windows; wherein
- the pin windows of adjacent wall panels align to allow the first locking pin section to be inserted into the pin void through the first pin window and the second locking pin section to be inserted into the pin void through the second pin window.
- 7. A system as recited in claim 1, in which:
- the wall panel comprises an array of bars;
- the loop portion of the anchor mesh extends through the array of bars; and
- the locking pin extends through the loop portion on a side of the array of bars opposite the anchor bearing bar.
- 8. A system as recited in claim 7, in which the wall panels are arranged such that a lower edge of a first wall panel overlaps an upper edge of a second wall panel located below the first wall panel, where the loop portion of the anchor mesh extends through the arrays of bars forming the first and second panels.
- 9. A system as recited in claim 8, in which the lower edge of the first wall panel and the upper edge of the second wall panel are arranged between the locking pin and the anchor bearing bar when the locking pin extends through the loop portion of the anchor mesh.
- 10. A method of stabilizing an earthen wall comprising the steps of:
- providing anchor mesh comprising a plurality of anchor bars each having a proximal end;
- bending the anchor bars adjacent to the proximal ends to form loop portions;
- rigidly connecting an anchor bearing bar to the anchor bars between the loop portions and the proximal ends;
- arranging the anchor mesh on a first layer of the earthen wall with the loop portion extending slightly beyond a face of the earthen wall;
- providing a wall panel;
- arranging the anchor mesh such that
- the anchor mesh is placed on top of a first layer of the earthen wall, and
- the loop portions of the anchor bars extend through at least a portion of the wall panel with the anchor bearing bar spaced a predetermined distance from a back surface of the wall panel to facilitate insertion of a locking pin through the loop portions;
- inserting the locking pin through the loop portion of the anchor mesh such that at least a portion of the wall panel is arranged between the locking pin and the anchor bearing bar; and
- forming a second layer of the earthen wall to cover the anchor mesh; and
- predetermining a distance between the loop portions and the anchor bearing bar such that, when the earthen wall acts on the wall panel, the loop portion of the anchor mesh deforms until the anchor bearing bar engages the back surface of the wall panel to maintain a position of the wall panel relative to the anchor mesh and thereby stabilize at least a portion of the earthen wall.
- 11. A method as recited in claim 10, further comprising the step of assembling a plurality of wall panels to form a retaining wall assembly that stabilizes the earthen wall.
- 12. A method as recited in claim 10, in which the wall panels are concrete members and a plurality of locking pins are provided, further comprising the steps of:
- forming a connecting void network in each of the wall panels, where the connecting void networks comprise a pin void and a plurality of mesh voids;
- inserting the loop portions of the anchor mesh into the mesh voids such that the loop portions are aligned with pin voids; and
- inserting the locking pins into the pin voids and thus through the loop portions.
- 13. A method as recited in claim 12, in which the step of inserting the locking pins into the pin voids comprises the steps of:
- forming the connecting void network such that it comprises first and second pin windows;
- providing first and second locking pins for each wall panel;
- arranging the wall panels such that the pin windows on adjacent wall panels are aligned;
- laterally displacing the first and second locking pins such that they enter a pair of aligned pin windows; and
- displacing the first and second locking pins along their axes towards each other.
- 14. A method as recited in claim 10, further comprising the step of forming the anchor mesh such that a distance between the anchor bearing bar and a portion of the anchor mesh that engages the locking pin allows the locking pin to be inserted through the loop portion during assembly but decreases by a controlled amount due to forces introduced on the wall panels during the process of forming the layers of the earthen wall.
- 15. A method as recited in claim 10, in which the wall panels comprise wire mesh, further comprising the steps of:
- arranging the wall panels such that a lower edge of a first wall panel overlaps and upper edge of a second wall panel;
- inserting the loop portions of the anchor mesh through the lower edge of the first wall panel and the upper edge of the second wall panel arranged below the first wall panel; and
- inserting the locking pins through the loop portions such that the lower edge of the first wall portion and the upper edge of the second wall portion are spaced between the locking pins and the anchor bars.
- 16. A method as recited in claim 15, further comprising the step of arranging construction fabric between the wall panels and the face of the earthen wall.
- 17. A retaining wall system for stabilizing an earthen wall, comprising:
- a plurality of wall panels assembled together to form a retaining wall that engages a face of the earthen wall, the wall panels being concrete members each having a connecting void network cast therein, where the connecting void networks comprise a pin void, a plurality of mesh voids, and first and second pin windows and the wall panels are arranged adjacent to each other such that a pin window of one of the wall panels is adjacent to a pin window of another of the wall panels;
- anchor mesh buried within the earthen wall, the anchor mesh comprising a plurality of anchor bars each having a proximal end and the anchor bars are bent adjacent to the proximal ends to form a plurality of loop portions, where the loop portions are each inserted into one of the mesh voids; and
- a plurality of locking pins, where each locking pin is inserted into a pin void and through the loop portions of the anchor mesh such that the locking pin engages the wall panel and the loop portions of the anchor mesh to maintain a position of the wall panel relative to the anchor mesh and thereby stabilize at least a portion of the earthen wall; wherein
- when the wall panels are assembled to form the retaining wall, the adjacent pin windows of adjacent wall panels allow the locking pins to be inserted into the pin voids.
- 18. A system as recited in claim 17, further comprising an anchor bearing bar attached to the loop portions of the anchor mesh, where the anchor bearing bar is configured to engage a rear surface of the wall panel when the earthen wall is formed.
- 19. A system as recited in claim 17, in which a length of the pin window is slightly longer than half of a length of one of the locking pins.
- 20. A method of stabilizing an earthen wall comprising the steps of:
- providing anchor mesh comprising a plurality of anchor bars each having a proximal end;
- bending the anchor bars adjacent to the proximal ends to form loop portions;
- arranging the anchor mesh on a first layer of the earthen wall with the loop portion extending slightly beyond a face of the earthen wall;
- providing a wall panel;
- forming in the wall panel a connecting void network comprising first and second pin windows;
- arranging the wall panels such that the pin windows on adjacent wall panels are aligned;
- arranging the anchor mesh such that
- the anchor mesh is placed on top of a first layer of the earthen wall, and
- the loop portions of the anchor bars extend through at least a portion of the wall panel;
- providing first and second locking pins;
- laterally displacing the first and second locking pins such that they enter a pair of aligned pin windows;
- displacing the first and second locking pins along their axes towards each other through at least one of the loop portions;
- forming the earthen wall such that the wall panels engage and stabilize the earthen wall.
- 21. A method as recited in claim 20, further comprising the step of assembling a course of wall panels before the locking pins are laterally displaced into the pair of aligned pin windows.
- 22. A method as recited in claim 20, in which the wall panels are concrete members, further comprising the steps of:
- forming the connecting void networks in the wall panels such that each connecting void network comprise a pin void and a plurality of mesh voids;
- inserting the loop portions of the anchor mesh into the mesh voids such that the loop portions are aligned with the pin voids; and
- inserting the locking pins into the pin voids and thus through the loop portions.
- 23. A method as recited in claim 20, further comprising the step of rigidly connecting an anchor bearing bar to the anchor bars between the loop portions and the proximal ends of the anchor bars such that a distance between the anchor bearing bar and a portion of the anchor mesh that engages the locking pin allows the locking pin to be inserted through the loop portion during assembly but decreases by a controlled amount due to forces introduced on the wall panels during the process of forming the layers of the earthen wall.
RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application claims priority of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/053,034 filed Jul. 18, 1997, and U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/053,779 filed Jul. 25, 1997.
The present invention relates to retaining wall systems and methods and, more specifically, to such systems and methods that allow structural wall panels to be simply, easily, and securely connected to buried anchor mesh.
US Referenced Citations (32)
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number |
Date |
Country |
0051424 |
Mar 1991 |
JPX |
2059484 |
Apr 1981 |
GBX |