swBausch
Military
- Sep 8, 2003
- 41
Friend asks me to provide guidance on "moving a hot tub".
Turns out the actual "moving" can be accomplished with rollers. About 20 feet over level ground.
Unfortunately, that "level ground" abuts a freshly created retaining wall about 3 foot high, the wall itself resting on hillside. The wall is created out of Home Depot pavers that have a setback lip on the underside. No facility for alignment rods or deadmen.
The spa is about 5,000 pounds when filled.
My gut response is anytime you want to park a spa on the edge of a hill that overlooks the next lot's roof, you might as well knock on the door and apologize in advance for destroying the neighbor's backyard.
The situation seems to be a catastrophic failure waiting to happen. If the retaining wall fails, the spa will be sitting on a 30 degree slope, slopping water over the low side. The bottom of this spa is a polyethelene sheet.
I also consider the spa adds the equivalent of four feet of soil; making the nearby retaining wall a candidate for engineering.
Any opinions on this?
The owner has ruled out any other remedy or location. Too close to a window, too far from the back door, too much money, etc.
My feeling is a spa should never be placed closer than 8-10 feet to a retaining wall of any height, or a retaining wall on the side of a hill.
Turns out the actual "moving" can be accomplished with rollers. About 20 feet over level ground.
Unfortunately, that "level ground" abuts a freshly created retaining wall about 3 foot high, the wall itself resting on hillside. The wall is created out of Home Depot pavers that have a setback lip on the underside. No facility for alignment rods or deadmen.
The spa is about 5,000 pounds when filled.
My gut response is anytime you want to park a spa on the edge of a hill that overlooks the next lot's roof, you might as well knock on the door and apologize in advance for destroying the neighbor's backyard.
The situation seems to be a catastrophic failure waiting to happen. If the retaining wall fails, the spa will be sitting on a 30 degree slope, slopping water over the low side. The bottom of this spa is a polyethelene sheet.
I also consider the spa adds the equivalent of four feet of soil; making the nearby retaining wall a candidate for engineering.
Any opinions on this?
The owner has ruled out any other remedy or location. Too close to a window, too far from the back door, too much money, etc.
My feeling is a spa should never be placed closer than 8-10 feet to a retaining wall of any height, or a retaining wall on the side of a hill.