Geotechnical Engineering in San Diego

A six-story mixed-use project on a redeveloped lot near Little Italy hit stiff marine terrace deposits at just 12 feet below grade. The initial design assumed deeper foundations, but the site's overconsolidated Pleistocene-age clays told a different story once the soil mechanics study advanced beyond the preliminary phase. San Diego's geology shifts rapidly within a few blocks: from Stadium Conglomerate to Bay Point Formation and into artificial fill along the Embarcadero. A rigorous soil mechanics study correlates stratigraphy across the parcel, identifies expansive clay seams that swell with winter rains, and provides the shear strength and compressibility data the structural engineer needs before sizing footings or a mat foundation. For San Diego projects within the Coastal Zone Overlay or requiring liquefaction screening per California Building Code Chapter 18, early integration of a CPT test program with selective sampling refines the subsurface model without excessive disturbance in sensitive silts.

San Diego's Bay Point Formation delivers undrained shear strengths exceeding 2,000 psf, but the weathered upper crust can lose 70% of that capacity when saturated.
Geotechnical Engineering in San Diego
Geotechnical Engineering in San Diego

Service characteristics in San Diego

The laboratory component follows ASTM D2487 for unified classification and ASTM D4318 for Atterberg limits, but what distinguishes a San Diego-focused soil mechanics study is the attention to moisture sensitivity. The region's Mediterranean climate produces distinct wet and dry seasons, and the upper 8 to 15 feet of weathered formation can cycle between fully saturated and bone-dry states. We measure collapse potential in low-density sandy silts using ASTM D5333 procedures, and run consolidated-undrained triaxial tests (ASTM D4767) on specimens trimmed from Shelby tube samples recovered below the groundwater table. For sites east of Interstate 15, where granitic residual soils derived from the Peninsular Ranges batholith dominate, we add slake durability and dispersion testing. Every soil mechanics study report we issue includes effective stress paths, drained and undrained parameters, and settlement estimates under the proposed bearing pressures.
  • Classification: ASTM D2487, D4318, D422
  • Shear strength: ASTM D4767 (CU triaxial), D3080 (direct shear)
  • Consolidation: ASTM D2435, D4546 for collapse/swell
  • Chemical: pH, resistivity, sulfate content per Caltrans methods
ParameterTypical value
Typical CPT tip resistance (qc) in Bay Point Formation30 – 80 kg/cm²
Undrained shear strength (su) from CU triaxial800 – 2,400 psf
Recompression ratio (Cr) for overconsolidated clays0.015 – 0.035
Sulfate exposure class per ACI 318 (Mission Valley area)S1 to S2 typical
Liquefaction screening depth per CBC §1803.5.12Top 50 ft evaluated
Expansive index (EI) for residual soils east of I-1540 – 90 (moderate to high)

Local geotechnical conditions in San Diego

The coastal humidity and shallow groundwater that characterize San Diego's Mission Bay and Coronado areas create a corrosion risk that surface reconnaissance alone cannot quantify. Sulfate concentrations in groundwater measured during our soil mechanics study have exceeded 1,500 ppm in several Tidelands parcels, pushing concrete exposure into severe categories under ACI 318. We extract pore water from undisturbed samples using a pneumatic squeezer and submit it for chemical analysis the same day to prevent ion precipitation. For projects within the Alquist-Priolo fault zones that transect parts of the city, the soil mechanics study must also address the potential for cyclic softening in saturated granular layers. A standard SPT-based liquefaction triggering analysis, corrected for fines content and overburden, identifies whether ground improvement techniques will be necessary before the structural design proceeds.

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Applicable standards: IBC 2024 / California Building Code Chapter 18 (Soils and Foundations), ASCE 7-22 (Minimum Design Loads – Seismic Provisions), ASTM D1586 (Standard Penetration Test), ASTM D2487 (Unified Soil Classification System), ASTM D4767 (Consolidated-Undrained Triaxial Compression Test)

Our services

A soil mechanics study in San Diego must address more than bearing capacity. The complex stratigraphy, seismic demands, and coastal exposure require a testing program tailored to the specific formation encountered. We structure each investigation around the performance requirements of the foundation type selected by the design team.

In-Situ Stratigraphic Profiling

Continuous CPT soundings with pore pressure measurement (CPTu) to map lensing in Bay Point and Lindavista Formations, correlated with selected SPT borings per ASTM D1586 for sampler recovery data.

Advanced Laboratory Testing

CU triaxial with pore pressure measurement, one-dimensional consolidation with load-unload cycles, and swell/collapse testing on undisturbed specimens trimmed in our temperature-controlled facility.

Liquefaction Triggering Analysis

Site-specific cyclic resistance evaluation using CPT-based methods (Boulanger & Idriss 2014) and SPT data, with post-liquefaction settlement estimates for the design earthquake per ASCE 7-22.

Corrosion and Chemical Assessment

Soil resistivity, pH, chloride, and sulfate profiling at foundation depth to support concrete mix design and corrosion protection specifications for steel elements in contact with ground.

Frequently asked questions

How deep do soil mechanics study borings need to go for a mid-rise structure in San Diego?

Per IBC Section 1803.5.2 and the California Building Code, borings must extend through all compressible strata and at least 10 feet into competent bearing material. For a five-story building on spread footings near downtown San Diego, we typically advance borings to 40-60 feet below grade, deeper if the Bay Point Formation is underlain by looser alluvium or if a basement is planned. The actual depth is confirmed once the structural loads and footprint are defined.

What is the typical cost range for a soil mechanics study on a single-family residential lot?

For a standard single-family residential lot in San Diego with one boring and basic laboratory testing, soil mechanics study costs generally range from US$3,540 to US$5,520 depending on depth, access constraints, and the number of samples tested. Hillside lots requiring slope stability evaluation or deeper borings due to bedrock refusal fall on the upper end of that range.

Does the soil mechanics study include a liquefaction analysis?

Yes. For any San Diego project requiring a building permit, the geotechnical report must address liquefaction potential per CBC §1803.5.12 if the site has shallow groundwater and saturated granular soils. Our soil mechanics study incorporates site-specific cyclic stress ratio calculations using the design earthquake magnitude and peak ground acceleration from the USGS hazard maps, combined with in-situ test data to produce a factor of safety against liquefaction.

How long does it take to receive the final soil mechanics study report?

Field investigation is typically completed in one to three days. Laboratory testing requires two to three weeks for consolidation and triaxial tests to reach completion. The final report with all parameters, bearing capacity recommendations, and settlement estimates is delivered within four weeks of fieldwork, though preliminary foundation recommendations can be provided sooner if the structural design schedule demands it.

What makes San Diego soil mechanics different from inland Southern California sites?

San Diego's coastal terrace deposits are geologically younger and more variable than inland alluvial fans. The marine influence on Bay Point and Lindavista Formations produces cemented sands that can lose strength when remolded, and sulfate concentrations in groundwater are significantly higher near the bay. Additionally, San Diego's PGA values on firm soil near the Rose Canyon fault zone can exceed 0.6g, requiring more rigorous cyclic testing than inland sites with lower seismicity.

Coverage in San Diego