andyl9063
Computer
- Jan 9, 2020
- 13
I'm on an 1/2 acre lot, the house with all the red arrows. My neighbor is above me with raised elevation of about 10 ft high being where their house is and sloping towards the back of their yard.
This gradually slopes down to where my house is. All of their gutters drain to the back of the yard and of course it all slopes into my yard. Neighbor house is 4800 sq ft so big roof.
It is coming through my yard where the circle and down red is marked. Then it pools where the square is. I have attached a video where it drains into my yard on one of the biggest rainfall we had this year so far.
We are in Georgia so red clay and the yard soaks up the water pretty fast. Normally gone with 1 day or 2 days.
I don't want to resort to last option where I grade it where it drains to the neighbor besides me or the neighbor behind me. That's another issue.
What solutions are there? I'm thinking rain garden or a catch all pond. French drain wouldn't work because there's no where to daylight it and drain it properly. The left side of the back yard is uphill, about 15 ft high towards the road.
Retaining wall, but it would eventually fail due to pressure and the water got to go somewhere.
Video link:
This gradually slopes down to where my house is. All of their gutters drain to the back of the yard and of course it all slopes into my yard. Neighbor house is 4800 sq ft so big roof.
It is coming through my yard where the circle and down red is marked. Then it pools where the square is. I have attached a video where it drains into my yard on one of the biggest rainfall we had this year so far.
We are in Georgia so red clay and the yard soaks up the water pretty fast. Normally gone with 1 day or 2 days.
I don't want to resort to last option where I grade it where it drains to the neighbor besides me or the neighbor behind me. That's another issue.
What solutions are there? I'm thinking rain garden or a catch all pond. French drain wouldn't work because there's no where to daylight it and drain it properly. The left side of the back yard is uphill, about 15 ft high towards the road.
Retaining wall, but it would eventually fail due to pressure and the water got to go somewhere.
Video link: