A-Z Construction & Restoration
📍 Syracuse & Central NY
❄️ SPRING THAW SPECIAL: Free Foundation & Chimney Inspections
📞 Call Now: 315-488-5292
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A retaining wall holds back soil on sloped properties to prevent erosion, create usable yard space, and protect foundations. In Syracuse, NY, retaining walls must be built to withstand heavy clay soils and repeated winter freeze-thaw cycles, which expand and contract the soil and can crack or topple an improperly built wall.
A retaining wall in Syracuse isn’t just a landscaping feature; it is a structural decision. Built right, with proper drainage and masonry engineered for Central New York’s freeze-thaw cycles, a retaining wall will hold for generations. Built without that knowledge, it leans, cracks, and fails, usually within a few winters. A-Z Construction has been building and repairing retaining walls in Onondaga County since 1986, and we know exactly what this ground demands.
Soil pressure or inadequate drainage, common after Syracuse winters
Seeing any of these signs? Call 315-488-5292 for a free on-site assessment.
Stabilization, repointing, drainage correction, crack repair. For walls that are structurally sound but showing wear.
Complete demolition and rebuild with engineered drainage and masonry block or natural stone.
Design and build for sloped lots, erosion control, and hardscape integration. Steps, patios, and walls together.
When a retaining wall changes the grade of your property, steps are part of the same structural decision, not an afterthought. A-Z Construction builds steps as an integrated element of every retaining wall project, using matching materials and an engineered footing system so the entire structure moves in unison through Syracuse and Central New York’s freeze-thaw cycles, and don’t separation over time.
We work in natural stone, concrete masonry block, and brick to match your existing landscape or home. Whether you need a single landing or a full run of steps descending a sloped lot, every set is sized, drained, and built to handle an Onondaga County winter complete with shovels, salt, and all.
Frequently asked by Syracuse and Onondaga County property and homeowners.
Most residential retaining walls in Syracuse run between $3,500 and $18,000 depending on height, length, material, and drainage requirements. Onondaga County’s clay soil almost always requires a perforated drain tile system behind the wall, which adds to the cost but is non-negotiable for longevity. Walls over four feet may also require engineered plans. We provide free written estimates so you know exactly what you’re looking at before any work begins.
In most cases, yes. Any retaining wall over four feet in height requires a building permit in the City of Syracuse and most Onondaga County municipalities. Some towns, like Manlius and DeWitt, have their own thresholds.”A-Z Construction handles the permitting process as part of every project. If you’d like to review requirements directly, the City of Syracuse Central Permit Office and the Town of Onondaga Building & Codes Department both publish current guidelines online.”
It depends on how far the wall has moved and what caused it. A wall that’s leaning slightly due to drainage failure behind it can often be stabilized and corrected. A wall that has lost structural integrity, shifted more than two inches, begun to separate, or has a compromised footing typically needs to come down and be rebuilt properly. We assess every wall honestly and won’t recommend a rebuild if repair will do the job.
Concrete segmental retaining wall (SRW) block and natural stone are the two best-performing materials in the Syracuse climate. Both handle freeze-thaw cycling well when properly drained. Poured concrete is also durable but less forgiving if drainage is imperfect. Railroad tie and timber walls are the weakest choice here. Syracuse’s wet winters accelerate wood rot, and most timber walls built in this area begin failing within 15 to 20 years.
A properly built masonry retaining wall – stone, concrete block, or poured concrete – with adequate drainage should last 50 years or more in Central New York. Timber and railroad tie walls typically last 15 to 25 years under the best conditions. The single biggest factor in wall longevity here isn’t the material; it’s drainage. A wall without proper water management behind it will fail regardless of what it’s made of.
The primary culprit is hydrostatic pressure, water trapped behind the wall with nowhere to go. Onondaga County’s heavy clay soil retains moisture rather than draining it, and when that water freezes in winter it expands with enormous force. Walls built without perforated drain tile, filter fabric, and proper gravel backfill are essentially holding back water as well as soil. Most retaining wall failures we see in this area trace back to inadequate drainage at the time of original construction.
Signs that a wall has moved beyond cosmetic wear into structural concern include leaning or tilting more than one inch per foot of height, visible cracking running horizontally across the face, bulging in the middle of the wall, soil washing through gaps, and any separation from adjacent steps or structures. If you’re seeing any of these on a wall that holds back a slope above a driveway, walkway, or structure, have it assessed before spring snowmelt adds additional water pressure behind it.
Read verified customer reviews and ratings gathered from Google and other trusted review sites.
We are proud of our consistent 5-star reviews, and even prouder of the trust our customers place in us.If your wall is leaning, cracking, or you’re ready to build one that lasts, we’ll come out, take a look, and give you a straight answer – no pressure, no obligation. A-Z Construction has been the first call for masonry work in Syracuse and Onondaga County since 1986. We’ll tell you honestly what the wall needs and put it in writing before any work begins.
Call 315-488-5292 or fill out the form and we’ll be in touch the same day.
Serving Syracuse, Camillus, DeWitt, Manlius, Fayetteville, Liverpool, Cicero, Baldwinsville, Skaneateles, and all of Onondaga County.