Don't make this Retaining wall Build Mistake! Huge Backyard Remodel part 1!
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- čas přidán 2. 05. 2023
- In this video you will be joining Tim and his crew on this huge backyard remodel! In this part of the series we will be focusing on how to build a retaining wall! Hope you all enjoy and don't forget to LIKE,SHARE,SUBSCRIBE and COMMENT!
part 2: • Massive Retaining wall...
part 3: • Concrete Patio Pour wi...
WEBSITE - www.odellconcrete.com
INSTAGRAM - / odellconcrete
FACEBOOK - / odellcompleteconcrete
TIK TOK - / odellcompleteconcrete - Jak na to + styl
This is an incredible project. You’ve got a hardworking crew going at it! I can’t wait for next video!❤
Thank you and yeah going to be a good one!
Timmy always has the good interesting projects. Also, takes courage to admit your mistakes before posting your videos so thanks for being transparent and sharing!
Yeah trying to expand the business and do alittle more
The guy in the blue shirt with tan baseball cap is an A++ employee. That guy is never resting, always doing something to help or the hardest job that needs being done. They guy that said "I'm always doing the hardest job" - he's right! Props to that guy. He started tamping and cleaning the ledges when there were too many doing rebar at once toward the end. Damn!
Haha yeah he’s a good worker !
Great video guys. Im a structural engineer, licensed in California. I would have designed that rebar differently and saved you guys tons of time.
I hear that
Exactly
Lots of rebar ! This wall isn't going any where 😅
The rebar job looks excellent and can't wait for pt. 2!!
It’ll be a good one! Thanks for watching!
Wow. Looks like a major project. I am looking forward to the rest of this series.
Yeah hope you stay tuned!
Great Video! Love the Walkthrough of the project, starting from the design drawings, to Value Engineering, and to the start of construction. Looking out for the next one!
Glad you liked the walkthrough wanted to make sure everyone got a good idea what we plan on doing for this project
The engineers in the peanut gallery here are worried the footing/wall are not sufficient enough to stabilize the pool and keep it from shifting. They fail to realize the deep end of the pool is opposite from the wall. The earthen wedge that sits under the shallow end secures the pool. If the deep end were meeting the new footer/wall there would definitely be concern.
It would take a huge quake to push that deep end up and over the wedge of dirt under the shallow end and that new wall you built. Great job.
I concur
Ty
Yep. People always think a pool is a huge surcharge when in actuality it is self contained. The surcharge only starts at the deepest point. Pools actually stabilize an upside grade.
That's one massive foundation for sure! Great work as always 👍👍
Thank you and yes it was
The proverbial man with a backhoe! Thanks for the video.
YW
Bravo 👏👏👏👏 can't wait for part 2
Me too
wow
impressive amount of rebar
can't wait for the finished product!
I hear that
im a steel fixer in australia and have done many retaining walls in the past and no doubt in the future 2. as a steel fixer i have to criticize your ties. now thats been said looks good guys ive never done one of this design and fingers crossed i never have 2 hahahaha i like it! youse did good
5/8 rebar bending is no joke XD lookin great Odell crew!
Thank you! 🙏
Great looking work, very nice!
Ty
Great video brother. Your dad taught you guys well.👍🏻🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
I concur
TY
I would have suggested "solid concrete" retaining wall instead of using concrete blocks filled with concrete. Static will pressure those wall joints underground constantly, which will crack and give way. Also, there is a pool right next to it and above it at the same time. 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
Concrete works
Nice work gentlemen!...As always
Ty
Great video, the rebar looks like over kill.but what did I know, I'm just a custom home rough in plumber. Great job you guys.
Looks great! Good job
Tt
Damn! That wall isn't going anywhere. Super great job.
TY
Great job, lotta hard work. Bending that 5/8 rebar must've been fun. Need some stakes for it looks like. Be sure to use the square top rebar safety caps as you go along, especially on a job like this. You can also run a 2x4 across the top of them too. Be easy to fall in that pit on them. Bummer about AT&T wires, hope not too 💰
The problem with wires buried like that is that makes the job “hand dig only” in proximity to the wire.
I concur
TY
wow big job nice work odell
Thank you
great video, so easy you tricked us we could do it ourselves!
Haha yeah always looks easier than it really is
Nice job. Bending that #5 even with the willard bender must have been a job. I used to work at a masonry building supply and we had one of those benders by the rebar racks to cut the 20 footers down to 10 and also do bend orders. On the #3 and #4 it was no problem, but #5 was no fun and I think it was the max that you could bend with that bender.
Yes that's true
How strong the wall needs to be really depends on what it is holding up, and what the land is capable of supporting. In my neighborhood, we've got expanding clay. I'm in Canada which also means that we have rather harsh winters. We often have several freeze and thaw cycle per season. Walls need to be rather sturdy or they will move. Heck, I've seen places where solid concrete walls got pushed out. The combo of expanding clay plus winter is no joke.
Yes, natural is rough
Amazing! 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Ty
Great job, rare mistake, but project was a le to continue.
Thanks for sharing
YW
Im impressed!
Ty
this is going to be a good one
It will be 😎
Get an SDS Max with a spade bit to dig into that hard dirt - works great.
Doing something similar for a garage wall up against a 13' high hillside. 32'' wide key for a 16'' block wall with a 30'' kick back and an 8'' slab going the other way. Just like this #5 bar in the foundation and 8'' o/c. Block courses get 2 #4 bars every other course. PLUS a 4 x 6'' keyway under the block for the grout
Looks like a footing for a multistory building. We’ve all located cables with a machine. I’ve done it and I was a cable splicer. Yes, I’ve mismarked and hit my own cables. Don’t be too hard on yourself - it happens bro. Can’t wait to see this project progress.
Yeah you could easily build a house on that footing and yeah it happens live and learn !
OK 2:46 THIS is a MONSTER FKN PROJECT!
Can't wait to see the finished product!
Let's get it on!
OSS
and here I am sweating over my 4 inch thick gazebo pad LOL. Looking forward to part 2
GL
Wow...that is one hell of a footing...we put in a 5' retaining wall about 22 years ago in our backyard that was 5' from the back property line. The footing was a 2' x 2' with a 1' x 1' key, and the first two courses of split face block were the monster 16" x 12" size, with standard 8" wide the rest of the height, as well as a french drain. All in all, with all the walls and the flatwork, we've got 96 yards of concrete- about 35-40 of that is in the walls.
Intense
Beautiful
TY
Good job... 👍🏾👍🏾
Ty
Good morning from Auckland, New Zealand ... 🙂🙂🙂
Good morning ☀️
Looks like a solid foundation to me.😁
That happened to me one time ..we were building brick fences ( privacy walls ) for condos in my area DFW Texas ..
We dug out footings for the concrete and I've never seen anything like it ..right under the sod ( about 2" or so ) some crew put phone lines ( back in the days of the old phone line internet hookups) , so these wires went to their phones and internet ..
It affected about 8 units or individual condos ..
I went down and bought some Scotch Tite fasteners and had to rewire all of them to get everyone hooked back up .
It was crazy , the sprinkler lines were only about 3" and some electrical was maybe 6" ...
It's crazy
Your just helping build for the neighborhood that's why that's all they want
Excelente trabajo saludos 👌👍
TY
0:50 This is what a back yard looks like, when someone who has ZERO skills and no clue.... tries over and over to make their own "improvements". When they actually were not smart enough to see the disaster after disaster they were creating !!!! You can really tell what a mess it was, because AFTER the demo and removing everything but the pool...the backyard looked better with just the dirt !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The ODELL guys did it RIGHT! In the business we call it a SCRAPE !!!!!!!!!!! Meaning we remove it all (except the pool) and start over from square one. Great work guys !
Geez did the owners hit the lottery? Nice work btw.
Maybe
Buen trabajo 👍🏼
Ty
I have forever scars on hands and arms from installing rebar. Oh well. No pain no gain. Nice work!
I concur
Tip from LA , I would suggest building your wall and footing cauge outside on grade, brace it and use a fork lift or crane depending on your final weight,, to lower the puppy in and then do some finale detailing ur bars... cuts your time in half if not more ,depends how fast your guys punk steel, ,,, cheers
Imteresting
Sweet 👍
😎
I wouldn't want to pay this bill , nice work !
Me too
That Makita tie wire tier is pretty slick.
Yes
Need to order pre bent bar.
Easier
That footing size is probably correct. You"ve have an empty pool that when filled will be ushing 150 lbs of liquide head per depth of the pool and it appears that the excavation has cut into the angle of repose.
Most likely
Not an expert on pools, but I’m and engineer and I do have concerns about the new foundation next to the existing pool. While it looks massive, and it is, I’m not sure how well this will hold the pool. Let’s hope the “statics” calculations don’t turn into “dynamics”. Civil and mechanical engineers know what I’m saying, while I’m a mere EE.
@@michaelc.3812 Exactly!
id also say get the supplier to cut bend from and tag your bars and ship to site,, youll cut down on payroll and field injury risk...
Have you ever had a rebar supplier pre cut and pre bend all the rebar needed for your project. Would it be cost effective for you? DR Albuququerque NM
Full sending never lifting 😏 🤙 mobbin deep 🙌 got them skills to pay them bills 👏
OSS
I would use solid concrete wall instead of blocks. Less steel required!
That’s a lot of dirt. Cool video
True
Man I'd kill to find people like you to learn from or get advice from over here in Ontario Canada lol, majority of people I've worked with have too much ego-knowitall attitude with terrible communication skills and EXTREMELY lazy. Asking questions around concrete/landscaping guys you get looked at funny and they belittle you. Most of these guys hate anyone that is trying to learn or apply what they already know for their own business. I was actually thinking of packing up here and moving down south. Keep up the good work!
Good idea
See you soon
I was wondering why I lost internet the other day... 😆 Thats a big job.
Bingo
Ahh yes bending 15m (5/8) is always fun. Nice jig setup
How much does it cost that project? thanks in advance.good job
After over 40yrs of home addition building in S. California I've never been asked to measure a crucial placement of a retaining wall by measuring off a wobbly wooden fence between the property. Fencing is not considered an accurate "property line" like the established hard corner of a residence. I would be on the phone with the engineer/designer/planner person with many questions. But oh well, what do I know because I learn new stuff every day.😇
I actually did have the exact location but just missed going over that part with film so I used what I had to make sense of the video for entertainment purpose.
In AZ, we have to be onsite with inspectors to explain that the fence is not property line when we are cutting it close to the easements. They always measure off fences here.
You got too virtue signal,now you can sleep better 😅.
Yes 811 before you dig. Thank you for telling people about safety.
Right on
Good for offsite
Thats a crazy footer for a 4 or 5ft retaining wall!! That looks more like a footer for a commercial building !!
Haha yeah that was I was thinking
Wow. That base could support an overhead EL train support. Did you study bridge building?
I suppose
I have heard about 811 so many times. Respecting the marks before any dig? I didn't know what it was actually for. Cool video. Was this a different project than your dad's?
I did block wall at 6 foot tall but tthis footing seems to be way over kill. I wonder if it's more for the pool?
Probably
Very nice. That wall will there until doomsday.
I concur
Greetings from PL
Hi
wow!
OSS
🙌
Tim, with that much rebar, and that volume of concrete going around it, I don't think anyone will ever take that wall out. Even if they wanted to! 🤣
Haha yeah it’ll be a nightmare!
I love ur content you need to work your way to texas love to work with you
Would be nice to expensive out here in cali
That's a lot of pool and dirt you are holding back, don't doubt it needs to be a really stout footing/wall. You'll never get in trouble for building something too strong.
True
Look up “Rod Chomper”. They make rebar shears and benders. Really save you guys some time!
Ok
what does 811 cover?
👍
Do the vertical 2x4 “legs/supports” holding up the horizontal 2x4 stay in the pour?
Stay tuned for part two
@@OdellCompleteConcrete
ok I will!!🤣
WIDELY oversized footing imho. nice vid thanx
You only have to go down as far as freeze line? Or structural load?!
It doesn’t even feeeze in Southern California xD
9:28 Yeah, you have to assume there is a 48" setback / easement off the property line...and there is usually something buried there. Electrical, phone, cable, fiber optic. Even when you have overhead power lines.
In Australia the good steel companies would take your plan do a take of ,bend and cut your steel ,all for the price of steel ,the cut and bending free.
Wow !!! :)
Oss
Very deep footing there.
Yooooo you need a rodbuster asap bro!!!!! Could help finish way faster brooooo
True
It was overkill if it were just dirt on the high side of the retaining wall. With a swimming pool, it is just right. The pool needs all the support it can get, either from the weight of the earth around it or the strength of a retaining wall. Love the explanations you give.
Ty
That makita tool comes in clutch, but they should have found a way to make it more compact for tighter spaces.
For sure
Good job on the wall bro. But you really should have some sort of shoring set up for this. Definitely looks a little high. Cave ins are no joke.
Scary
I almost always forget to call 811 on rear utility easements. I even called once and gave the address and directios and 811 said they wouldn't do a backyard. So i dug and hit a power line. Power came out and lost their mind someone could have died. I said i called and they said i didn't need it and there was no ally to know it was rear utility. I double and triple check now for the boxes to get an idea of where utilities are.
good idea
Obviously rear easement by the poles, but why they had underground as well as aerial is interesting. Looked like the underground portion was fiber?
Strange
Did that rebar inspection pass first try ? Doesn’t look like what was drawn on the plans
It did and the plans changed because we changed the footing
Crazy amount of steel and footing for height of r wall.
I hate bending rebar with those manual benders. I have an electric one but I'd have probably had a shop do those Z and j bars.
But you guys did a great job.
Thank you and yeah I thought about subbing it out but I do enjoy keeping everything in house
I have seen a device for taking out stubborn bolts called a torque multiplier. A clever young person might figure out a way to add the multiplier to the rebar bender avoiding trips to the Chiro.
Sounds easy
That's absolutely overkill for a retaining wall. But I guess there's no worry about it failing lol. Nice work
OSS
Isn't it holding up part of the pool? Water pushing out on the sides has a lot of force.
@@RH-cv1rg Yea it's definitely oversized for the pool load.
Talk about overkill, heck yes, old safety Sally went wild on this one. But what can you do, nothing but carry on. Oh yeah, you will need a good beating for hitting that line
That AT&T line looks to be trespassing on private property?
What is the right of way setback?
Really sucks when you do call 811 and they don’t mark the correct lines.
Last water line repair job I did.
The electric was NOT where they said it was supposed to be.
Luckily it’s Florida sand and I was hand digging anyway. 😂
True
That foundation should be able to hold back ground movement for half the county... Wow.
Yeah I would think so!