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Allegheny Wall Works

Guide / Warning signs

Signs of a failing retaining wall: a Pittsburgh field checklist

Published by Allegheny Wall Works. Last reviewed July 2026.

Retaining walls announce their failures in advance. On Pittsburgh's wet, creeping slopes the announcements come earlier and more often than in most metros, which is genuinely good news: nearly every collapsed wall spent years describing exactly how it would fail. Here is the vocabulary, sign by sign.

Leaning or tilting

What you see: The wall is visibly out of plumb, or the gap between the wall top and a fixed reference (fence, house corner) has grown.

What it means: The soil pressure behind the wall is exceeding what the structure can resist, usually because water has made the backfill heavier. Lean is the single clearest failure signal, and it is progressive: walls do not lean back.

High. Assess promptly, and quickly if the wall supports a driveway, slope, or structure.

Bulging or bowing

What you see: A section of the wall face swells outward while the rest holds line. Common mid-height on block and timber walls.

What it means: Localized pressure, very often trapped water, is deforming the wall from behind. Bulges concentrate stress at their edges and tend to fail as a unit when they go.

High. A bulge is closer to collapse than a uniform lean of the same size.

Cracking

What you see: Hairline crazing, vertical cracks, or diagonal stair-step cracks following the joints in a block wall.

What it means: Hairline surface cracks are often just age. Widening cracks, and especially diagonal stair-step patterns, mean the wall is moving differentially: one part is settling or rotating relative to another.

Medium, unless cracks are widening or accompany lean or bulge, then high. Photograph with a tape measure and compare monthly.

Separation and stepping

What you see: The wall pulls away from a return corner, stairs, or an adjoining structure, or block courses shift out of line horizontally.

What it means: Different parts of the wall are on different foundations, literally. Something under one section, often washed-out or saturated soil, is letting it move independently.

Medium to high, depending on rate. Movement at connections tends to accelerate once started.

Water where it should not be

What you see: Efflorescence (white mineral bloom), persistent wet patches on the face, moss lines, water seeping from joints instead of weep holes.

What it means: The wall’s drainage is not working, so water is pushing through the structure itself. Hydrostatic pressure is the leading cause of wall failure in this region, and these are its fingerprints before movement starts.

Medium as a symptom, but this is the cheapest stage to act. Fixing drainage now is what prevents every sign above.

Soil movement above or below

What you see: New cracks in the ground above the wall, soil slumping against the wall top, dips or sinkholes behind it, or soil heaving at the wall base.

What it means: The slope itself is moving, not just the wall. Tension cracks above a wall are how hillsides announce a developing slide, and heave at the base can mean the wall is rotating through the soil.

High. This can be a slope stabilization problem wearing a retaining wall costume; the assessment should look at both.

Material giving up

What you see: Timber that is soft or crumbling at grade, block faces spalling off in flakes, mortar joints turning to sand.

What it means: The structure is losing cross-section. In this climate, 30 to 45 freeze-thaw cycles a year turn small material losses into large ones on a schedule.

Medium. Deterioration without movement allows planned replacement instead of an emergency.

A monitoring habit that costs nothing

Photograph the wall from the same three spots, with a tape measure or level in frame, dated. Repeat after every notably wet stretch and at least each spring and fall. Movement you can measure converts "I think it looks worse" into a fact a contractor, an engineer, or an insurer has to engage with. Pittsburgh's failure season is late winter through spring, when the ground is heaviest; that is when comparison photos earn their keep.

When to stop watching

Any lean or bulge that grows between photos, any new soil crack above the wall, or any single sign on a wall that holds up a driveway, a slope, or a neighbor's property: that is the line. Past it, monitoring is just watching the price go up. The failing wall page explains what a licensed contractor assesses, and the assessment itself is free and carries no obligation.

FAQ

Warning sign questions homeowners ask

How fast does a failing retaining wall actually fail?

Both timelines happen. Some walls lean an inch a year for a decade; others go from first bulge to collapse in a single saturated spring. The rate depends on water, load, and what the wall is made of, which is why the practical answer is monitoring: dated photos with a tape measure in frame, compared after wet weather. Any acceleration is the signal to stop watching and get an assessment.

Which warning sign is the most serious?

Combination is what matters most. Any single sign paired with visible movement, a lean that grows, a bulge, fresh soil cracks above the wall, outranks any sign alone. If forced to pick one, tension cracks in the ground above a wall deserve the most respect, because they suggest the slope, not just the wall, is moving.

The wall is old but shows none of these signs. Should I do anything?

Old and straight is a good sign, and plenty of well-built walls outlast their builders. Two cheap habits still pay: keep water managed (downspouts away from the wall, weep holes clear) and take a dated reference photo once a year. If the wall ever does start moving, that baseline photo turns arguments into measurements.

Seeing one of these signs on your wall?

Send a photo with the form and a licensed local contractor will tell you what it means on your actual wall, free and without obligation.

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