Hi,
I'd like to put to good use some cubic meters of dirt that were excavated from a house site, to build a couple of terraces in front of the house, so to avoid it being hauled offsite to landfill, somewhere.
The dirt has been piled so that the more fertile part/top soil was separated from the subsoil.
The house in question lays on flat ground where a somewhat steep slope starts, a few meters off the house basement, reaching the access road at the bottom of the slope.
This embarkment has a slope which would need to be filled (in part) in order to create these terraces, for growing veggies since it has a good S aspect and it's real close to the house, so it would be perfect a zone 1 garden, but I am not sure how to proceed to get the job done.
At least having a design of sorts to show to the machine operator would make things easier for him/her.
Below is topo map showing what the contours look like.
(for some reason this doesn't show up, I'll attach it below)
The area where the terraces are wanted is enclosed within the magenta colored line.
Each contour line in the topo map has a gradient of 1 m with respect to the next. So the vertical distance from the bottom of the access road till the top of this small hill is about 8 m high
We'd like to have a first terrace right outside in front of the two buildings. That's probably the easy part since this is still pretty flat ground, and at least another one
right below.
I guess we will need to build some retaining walls given the steep slope (seems to be 1:1 or 45ยบ) in order to contain the dirt that will be downloaded there, and make the terrace wide
enough. but I am not sure whether we can do it without having to set up the wall.
I attach a few pics so that you can have an idea of what the slope looks like
I am also considering other (simpler) options like filling the slope somehow with this salvaged dirt, but not with the intention of making a day-by-day usable terrace, but instead using it for creating a sloping embarkment and plant it with herbs bushes and fruiting shrubs, and an understoy of herbacious plants for covering and stabilizing the soil. There are other parts, may be even on the north side of the house where the zone1 garden could go, away from the shadow of the house, but....I'll see what ideas come up first.
Cheers