Soil reinforcement has become a well-established technology, providing alternatives to an increasingly large number of critical geotechnical structures. While significant advances have been made to characterize the soil-reinforcement interaction of individual reinforcement layers, field evidence has been collected that suggests unaccounted benefits in structures where the vertical spacing between reinforcements is comparatively small. The nature of the complex interactions that may develop between contiguous reinforcement layers, possibly leading to a “composite” behavior of the reinforced soil mass, requires full characterization. The degree of interaction between adjacent reinforcement layers is expected to impact, perhaps significantly, ...