Geogrid soil reinforcement must be installed for any walls over 4 feet tall or for walls with slopes or loads.
In a Mosaic wall, the minimum vertical spacing between geogrid layers is 10 inches, placed between panels—not between the units within a Mosaic panel. The number of geogrid layers needed for a wall, the type and strength of geogrid required, and the length of geogrid needed is dependent on soil conditions, wall height and loads or surcharges above the wall. This detail is supplied by a licensed civil engineer.
Caution: You are responsible for verifying site conditions, obtaining necessary final designs from a qualified, licensed civil engineer, and complying with all local building codes and engineered plans. If you change an engineer’s plan, YOU are liable.
Geogrid must be installed so that the strongest direction runs
perpendicular to the wall face. Improper geogrid installation can result
in wall failure. Geogrid generally is strongest in the direction it is
rolled.
Place the end of the geogrid on the flat top of the Mosaic panels about 1 inch from the wall face and roll it away from the wall.
Place the end of the geogrid on the flat top of the Mosaic panels
about 1 inch from the wall face and roll it away from the wall. You can
either precut geogrid to the lengths needed, or simply cut the geogrid
at the necessary length when rolling away from the wall.
Place adjacent sections of geogrid directly next to each other.
There should be no gaps in the geogrid along the length of the wall.
Do not overlap geogrid layers directly on top of one another.
Slick surfaces of geogrids will not hold in place properly when directly
overlapped. Also, overlapping geogrid in the units will cause the wall
to be uneven at that point and may create a noticeable ripple in your
wall.
Placing geogrid behind curves and corners requires special layout and overlapping procedures. For more information, see Technical Bulletin No. 3. With the geogrid rolled out, connect the geogrid to the wall by
installing and pinning the next course of VERSA-LOK Mosaic panels.
Pull the geogrid taut and anchor the end—typically with stakes or backfill material.
For geogrid to be effective, there cannot be any slack in the
geogrid. Pull the geogrid taut and anchor the end—typically with stakes
or backfill material. The geogrid only needs to be pulled tight enough
so there is no slack; don't pull the geogrid so taut that you move your
wall.
With your geogrid pulled taut and secured at the wall face by at least one pinned course, proceed with placement of drainage aggregate, backfilling and compaction over the geogrid.
Note: Place at least 6 inches of backfill before using any tracked equipment on top of geogrid.
Tip: If you are installing up to three courses before backfilling, you can install and pin the geogrid on the specified course and then flip the grid over the front of the wall. Compact in lifts of 6 inches or less and when you get to the course with the geogrid, simply flip the geogrid back over the wall, secure it and compact.
With your geogrid pulled taut and secured at the wall face by at least one pinned course, proceed with placement of drainage aggregate, backfilling and compaction over the geogrid.