Once youve measured out your fence and purchased the required wire mesh panels, rocks, and other materials youre ready to begin.
contains other products and information you need, so please check it out.
Also, be aware that you may need a council permit to build a gabion wall, but that will depend on the size of the wall and your particular local council requirements.
Join your galvanised wire panels together with wire to form the base and sides of the boxes.
Hold each box in place by inserting wire down each corner of the box. This will hold the box shape while you fill the box with rocks.
Large size gabions may benefit from some diagonal bracing across the corners as well as horizontally at mid height.
You can save money by using old concrete blocks and cheaper stone in the middle of the gabion and saving the more expensive smart looking rocks for the visible outer parts.
Once youve got all the rocks in place simply wire the top panel on and youre finished.
For full details on the gabion walls - https://profence.com.au/gabion-wall/
Ive always loved the look of gabion walls the subtle variation in stone colour, the texture of different rock fillings and the light and shade of stone and crevice. Theyve been around for a while in road building and industrial landscapes, but when I went to try and find out how to build a small one for myself, I found information was pretty sketchy. I didnt want to build a retaining wall, just a small free-standing gravity gabion wall about 1m (3 ft) high.
It all started with the letterbox. Weve had bad luck with letterboxes. The lovely wooden house-style one made by my dear old dad was kicked apart some years ago by drunken football fans, and the repaired version was stolen. We ended up with a small metal letterbox sitting on some concrete blocks for a couple of years while we landscaped the front garden. Serviceable but pretty embarrassing! I decided I wanted something really, really solid, so a wall-style box fitted to gabion wall at postie-preferred height became my plan.
Sourcing the galvanised gabion mesh cage
First we had to find how to make a galvanised mesh cage to holds the rocks. Luckily, in Sydney we found Permathene P/L, which makes kit form gabion cages in a variety of sizes. Their gabion cage mesh is coated with Galfan (aluminium 5%, zinc 95%), a longer-lasting material than plain galvanising, and the aluminium in the coating will weather to a lovely grey patina. We chose a stepped design that used a 2m x .5m x .5m (6ft x 20inch x 20 inch) base layer, topped with a 1m x .5m x .5m (3ft x 20 x 20) second tier. Total cost $200.
Levelling the ground
We used a hoe to level the pad area on the front boundary. The soil here, if you could call it that, is close to the consistency of concrete so we were able to put our gabion wall on whats there. If you have slippery clay soil, you will need to replace about 150mm depth with a compacted gravel or road base layer to make a stronger support, or otherwise the soil might slump under the weight. Then we used a level on a long straight-edge to check the pad was level in both directions.
Keeping out the grass
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As our gabion wall sits along our front boundary, I wanted to make sure that the couch grass on the nature strip couldnt get up into the wall, from where it would be impossible to remove. Ive seen a couple of sad-looking gabions where thats happened. We used some powder-coated, corrugated 100mm (4 inch) edging we bought in a roll from Bunnings Hardware. The soil was so tough that we had to use an Ozito demolition hammer to cut a trench for the edging.
We spread weed mat over the pad and tucked it down tightly behind the edging, using a length of in-ground treated pine to push it straight.
Assembling the gabion cages
We started by laying the mesh sheets out flat with the base surrounded by the four sides. Our cages are held together with a spiral of gal steel that you wind through the adjacent edges of the mesh panels. Its easy to do as the spiral exactly matches the mesh grid. When it reached the end, we used pliers/multigrips to pinch each end of the spiral so it cant slip out.
Our 2 metre (6ft) long lower cage has a middle cross panel to stop it bulging out, which we wired in along its bottom edge when the cage was open on the flat, and then down each vertical side when we had the cage in place. The cages have bracing ties across each corner about half way up which we positioned and pinched closed.
Packing the rocks
We have a lot of on-site sandstone which we broke up into smaller pieces with the Ozito demolition hammer. Filling with onsite materials also means the gabion wall fits really well into its surrounding landscape. Each piece has to be about 150-200mm (5-8) in 2 dimensions and 100mm (4) thick. Tony worked out a clever system using the diameter of old plastic pots if it went through the 200mm (8) width but not through the 100mm (4), it was the right size. After calculating we wouldnt have enough broken rock, we decided to re-use some leftover concrete blocks and old bricks for bulk in the centre of each cage.
Packing the rocks takes some time. The sandstone varies in colour through white, yellow, pink and brown and I wanted to mix up those colours. I also looked through the broken rocks to pick out those with a flatter face so I could put them on the presentation street side. Corners are trickier, and we learned to put aside pieces with a natural right-angled corner so theyd fit nicely in both dimensions.
We worked in layers, using rejected smaller pieces to fill up any voids and to wedge the best rocks against the face of the cage, tessellating them as closely as possible, and then filling in behind them to hold them in place.
Second layer
Once wed packed (and then repacked in a few spots) the lower cage, we wired on its lid and then assembled the second layer on top. Before we packed the second layer, we attached our new brushed steel letterbox in place using two timber backing pieces. We filled the second layer like the first, using some old bricks and blocks in the centre. I found I needed to get down low to check that Id tessellated the pieces carefully enough that you couldnt look through to the central blocks, and I made sure to leave some really good looking pieces for the top layer. Ive seen gabions that are personalised with found, or site objects, (like those in Ballast Point Park) but Tony thought that idea was a bit kitsch. However, when wed finished, I realised Id lost an earring, so its in there for keeps now!
Finished!
With the second lid wired on (after a fair bit of my fussing about and repacking some sub-standard areas), we were finished. Weve had many people stop as they walk by and admire it since. And Id like to see some ratbag try and kick this letterbox over.
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