Why load planning matters
Raised beds can concentrate substantial weight onto a small footprint. A 1.2 m × 0.6 m bed has only 0.72 m² of area, so a 1,000 kg fill translates to about 1,390 kg/m². On balconies and rooftops, that intensity can exceed what many surfaces were designed to carry, especially when loads are localized near an edge. Spreading beds across multiple support lines usually reduces peak stress.
What drives raised bed weight
Volume is the first driver: weight rises linearly with bed area and media depth. Density is the second driver: lightweight mixes may be near 550 kg/m³, while moist topsoil can be around 1,400 kg/m³. Water is the hidden third driver; one liter weighs about one kilogram, and saturated media can add 10–30% more mass than a dry baseline.
Interpreting load per area
This calculator reports both total weight and load per area (kg/m² and psf). Load per area is useful for comparing different bed sizes because it normalizes the result. It also provides an estimated pressure in kPa, which is numerically similar to kN/m², a common way engineers express distributed loads. Use the design values when you need a conservative comparison.
Choosing realistic density inputs
Start with a preset, then adjust for your blend. Compost-heavy mixes are often lighter than mineral soils, while gravel layers are commonly 1,500–1,800 kg/m³. If you regularly irrigate heavily, increase the moisture factor and water allowance to reflect retained water. A safety factor of 1.10–1.50 helps cover variability in compaction, wet seasons, and future planting changes.
Documenting results for compliance
Use the CSV export to keep a record of inputs and computed loads for each installation. For projects on shared buildings, the PDF report can support approvals by showing assumptions, design load with safety factor, and a clear weight breakdown. Keeping consistent records also helps you compare season-to-season media changes and optimize mixes for lower weight. Store one report per bed location for audits. Recheck after changing soil depth annually.