Northwest Florida's sandy soil and heavy rainfall create real challenges for properties with grade changes, slopes, and drainage issues. A properly engineered retaining wall solves these problems — holding soil in place, managing water flow, and creating usable flat space on sloped lots. Keep It Wet Concrete designs and builds concrete retaining walls throughout the Emerald Coast that combine structural integrity with lasting visual appeal.
When You Need a Retaining Wall
Retaining walls serve a critical structural function — they resist the lateral pressure of soil that would otherwise slide or erode. Common situations where our clients need retaining walls include:
Sloped yards where erosion is washing soil into neighboring properties or drainage structures. Grade changes between a driveway and yard, or between properties at different elevations. Creating level terraces on hillside lots for patios, gardens, or play areas. Protecting foundations from soil pressure and water migration. Shoreline and waterfront properties where erosion threatens structures.
Concrete Retaining Wall Options
We build several types of concrete retaining walls depending on the height, load, and aesthetic goals of the project:
Poured-in-place concrete walls provide maximum strength for taller walls and heavy loads. They can be formed to any shape and finished with texture, color, or veneer to complement your property.
Concrete masonry unit (CMU) block walls offer excellent strength with a more modular construction approach. Cores are filled with concrete and rebar for structural integrity, and the surface can be stuccoed, painted, or left with a split-face texture.
Decorative segmental block walls use interlocking units for walls up to 4 feet without engineering (taller walls require engineering). These are popular for landscape terracing and garden borders.
Drainage Is Everything
A retaining wall that doesn't manage water will eventually fail — hydrostatic pressure from trapped water behind the wall is the number one cause of retaining wall failure. Every wall we build includes proper drainage systems.
We install perforated drain pipe (French drain) behind the wall at the footing level, surrounded by clean gravel and wrapped in filter fabric to prevent clogging. Weep holes are placed at regular intervals along the base of the wall. Backfill behind the wall uses free-draining aggregate, not the native sandy soil.
In Florida's heavy rainfall environment, getting drainage right isn't optional — it's the most critical part of the installation.
Engineering & Permits
Retaining walls over 4 feet in height typically require engineering plans and building permits in Okaloosa and Walton counties. We work with structural engineers to design walls that meet all code requirements and site-specific conditions.
Even for walls under 4 feet, proper engineering principles — adequate footing depth, proper reinforcement, and correct drainage — make the difference between a wall that lasts decades and one that leans or fails within a few years. We build every wall to engineering standards regardless of permit requirements.