CMU Masonry Fence - Dooley Wall
CMU Masonry Fence - Dooley Wall
(OP)
Does anyone have a detail of this? I lost mine - it is 4" unreinforced CMU, fence 6" high, spanning horizontally to pilasters that have a couple of #3 or #4 rebars and trench footing. I don't recall pilaster spacing, footing size, etc.






RE: CMU Masonry Fence - Dooley Wall
RE: CMU Masonry Fence - Dooley Wall
RE: CMU Masonry Fence - Dooley Wall
Except, that’s not the way the fence builders do it unless you watch then very closely. And, there seems to be a few variations on the theme depending on exactly where you are located and who the block supplier is. The fence I inspected was in the Phoenix area and was dry laid, with no mortared horiz. joints or horiz. joint reinforcing. The 4" wall blocks were keyed together at the horiz. jnts. and just butted together at the vert. jnts., maybe there was a keying arrangement there too, laid in running bond. The pilaster blks. were dry laid, and core filled, but not always full to the top blk. Then there was a 2" cap blk. on top of the pilaster. The vert. rebars in the pilaster cores seemed to be a pretty random detail, and the stl. down into the ftg. was more likely than not just stabbed into the ftg. The ftgs. were about 12" x 8" deep under the wall, hand dug, with no rebar that I could see; and the pilaster ftgs. were just 16-24" +/- drilled to pretty random depths and belled out a bit at the top to make them look larger in dia. All-in-all, it was a pretty shaky proposition. They were still standing, leaning in some locations, but had suffered some serious washouts in the foundations. Now, what to do to fix them?
RE: CMU Masonry Fence - Dooley Wall
RE: CMU Masonry Fence - Dooley Wall
RE: CMU Masonry Fence - Dooley Wall
Most are built using 4" walls spanning between vertical pilasters that carry the wind loads into the ground. Since there is little vertical load from the 4" wall, it is not necessary to have a strip footing under the wall portion, but it is common for finishing/appearance purposes.
Some of the walls were built in place with some bond beams and mortared to the pilasters, while others were built elsewhere with every few courses a bond beam a bond beam and the panels were set between/into the pilasters.
In a couple of areas, some walls (usually 6" or 8" thick) were built in a factory by a block laying machine and erected/set at the site. - Every few days, I drive past some DOT sound barrier walls (12'-16' high).
Dick
Engineer and international traveler interested in construction techniques, problems and proper design.