Atika:
It seems to me, that as an engineer, you have to ask questions like; what are the likely loadings and how likely are they, and what does it cost to design against these loads, and what does it cost to occasionally rebuild a section of wall if some drunken turkey does run into the wall? It seems to me, that more and more, many of you guys want the codes to tell you, “exact wording,” everything you can and can’t do, in every possible situation, and then to provide a design guide with worked out problems, into which you can plug your own particular numbers for the all perfect solution, for every possible problem, no thinking required. Did they ever tell you, during your engineering training, that sometimes you have to consider the various practical alternatives, and do a little free (but well informed) thinking, about reasonable solutions, to slightly unusual problems, and the codes may not cover them all. And, there may actually be some disadvantage to approaching the building authorities with your question directly. They might think it is a good and necessary idea/requirement, and double the cost of your walls, with little return or improvement to your project or the public safety and welfare. I suspect that 90% of the walls on the property are actually nowhere near any vehicular traffic and that the few lengths of wall needing it could be guarded by a few well placed large rocks with some flowers around them, called a garden, at a tee intersection for example. But, then you run the risk of some smart attorney claiming that your rock ran into the front end of his client’s car, while in a drunken stupor.