This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Health & Fitness

BLOG: Rethinking Retaining Walls Has Hanover Company Seeing Green

The Maryland Department of Natural Resources and University of Maryland helped back SmartSlope, a Hanover-based company that is revolutionizing retaining walls.

Add living retaining walls to the list of ideas that are so simple yet ingenious, it’s amazing no one thought of them sooner.

SmartSlopea fledgling public-private venture in Hanover, MD—is using concrete and plants to create functional yet aesthetically pleasing retaining walls that provide structural slope retention with the lightest weight-to-coverage ratio in the industry.

“Our walls provide drip irrigation and can be part of a storm water management plan—they’re essentially vertical rain gardens,” said Jimmy Dick, new product developer for SmartSlope.

Find out what's happening in Elkridgewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Rainwater that permeates the ground above one of SmartSlope’s walls seeps out through it and slowly waters small soil pockets spaced along its face, creating an ideal habitat for plants. With time, the plants’ roots help further secure the slope.

The results are striking.

Find out what's happening in Elkridgewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

“They stamp concrete and even color it to make it more visually appealing, but I think we’ve reached the limits of what’s possible in terms of beautifying cement. It’s still a concrete wall,” said Dick. “We offer an enhanced appearance.”

In addition to the visual benefits, SmartSlope’s walls are superior to conventional segmented retaining walls because they use 50 percent less concrete. “We’re in the business of converting hardscapes to greenscapes,” said Dick.

SmartSlope received financial backing from Maryland Department of Natural Resources and University of Maryland, which collectively own 7 percent of the company.

Since it was launched two years ago, the firm has experienced impressive growth and currently has 65 projects in progress.

“We used to install walls ourselves, but now we focus on consulting with landscape architects, designers and installers—plant selection and engineering, that type of thing,” said Dick.

Most of the firm’s customers are commercial and residential property owners. “We really haven’t done much work on highways, but we have experienced an increase in the size and scope of our projects,” said Dick. “This is gaining favor with time.”

This story originally appeared on www.GreenBusinessMatters.com.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?