Soil Placement Drives Long-Term Urban Tree Performance

Soil in urban environments rarely provides the conditions trees need to grow and thrive. Limited rooting space, compaction, and conflicts with surrounding infrastructure all work against long-term tree performance.

That’s why designers and contractors use soil cells — not just to support pavements, but to create a stable, healthy soil environment beneath them.

We’ve put together a short video that shows how crews install planting soil in a RootSpace® Soil Cell System. Soil placement plays such a critical role in long-term tree performance and pavement stability.

In the video, we walk through the process step by step. Installers place planting soil directly into open soil cells, compact it in controlled lifts, and verify density before installing the final lids. This method creates consistent density, prevents settlement, and supports healthy root growth beneath urban surfaces.

 

RootSpace® soil cells deliver a 97% void ratio, maximizing space for planting soil while allowing air, water, and roots to move freely throughout the system.

  • During installation, crews place soil directly into open soil cells rather than through the lids.
  • This open-top access allows installers to walk the system and evenly compact soil in controlled lifts, ensuring uniform density across the entire soil volume.
  • Along the perimeter, crews temporarily install lids for alignment, then remove them so they can top up, compact, and verify soil before securing the final lids.
  • Once crews fully fill and compact the system, they install the remaining lids.

This approach eliminates air pockets, prevents long-term settlement, and supports healthy root growth — all while maintaining pavement stability under heavy urban loads.

It’s a quick look at the installation details that make a lasting difference.

Raingardens are designed to manage rainfall where it lands. Instead of sending water straight into underground pipes, they slow, store

Urban tree populations in cities around the world are under pressure. Despite the clear benefits trees bring, including cooling streets,

When the phrase root girdling appears in a specification meeting or planning discussion, it tends to stop the conversation cold.

One of the biggest challenges facing the urban greening industry today is how we respond effectively to the accelerating climate

Planting a tree is often framed as an act of optimism, a gesture toward a greener, more hopeful future. But

Sustainable Drainage Systems (SuDS) are most effective when they are treated as a core part of urban design rather than

Designing urban landscapes that successfully support both healthy tree growth and the structural needs of pavements, pathways, and vehicle areas

For more than a decade, the UK has broadly agreed on the direction of travel for surface water management. Policy

Our existing urban drainage systems are being asked to do far more than they were ever designed for. Denser development,

When the phrase root girdling appears in a specification meeting or planning discussion, it tends to stop the conversation cold.