The contrast between the silty-clay flats near the Nechako River and the dense glacial till terraces up in the Hart Highlands defines shallow foundation design across Prince George. A site on River Road might encounter compressible alluvial layers at just two meters, while a property in College Heights sits on stiff, overconsolidated till that breaks a shovel. Our experience in Prince George shows that the same footing geometry can behave entirely differently depending on which of these surficial geology units you are building on. Before sizing a footing, we typically pair the investigation with test pits to log the stratigraphy visually, which is especially useful where the till contains erratic boulders that can confuse geophysical data. The city’s frost penetration depth of 1.8 meters adds another dimension, pushing bearing elevations below the active freeze-thaw zone.
Two sites in Prince George, separated by a kilometer, can show a 150 kPa difference in allowable bearing pressure due to the glacial deposition history alone.
Methodology applied in Prince George

Typical technical challenges in Prince George
Prince George sits at roughly 575 meters above sea level in a broad valley where winter temperatures routinely drop below -30°C, and the 2015 earthquake swarm near the Rocky Mountain Trench reminded local engineers that intraplate seismicity is real here. The most expensive risk we see in shallow foundation design is differential heave caused by frost-susceptible soils that were not properly identified before construction. Silts from the former glacial lake bed are particularly frost-susceptible, and if a footing sits above the frost line or on poorly drained ground, the heave can lift one corner of a building unevenly. Another concern is the presence of collapsible silty sand lenses within the till, which can settle abruptly when saturated by a broken water line or heavy rain-on-snow events common in Prince George’s shoulder seasons. We mitigate these hazards through grain-size analysis to classify frost susceptibility and by specifying non-frost-susceptible backfill extending at least the full frost depth below finished grade. Where the water table is high near the river, we also evaluate bearing capacity reduction due to buoyant unit weight.
Our services
Our Prince George shallow foundation design scope adapts to the project stage and site complexity, from single-family residential additions to commercial buildings in the downtown core.
Bearing Capacity and Settlement Analysis
We calculate the ultimate and allowable bearing pressure using site-specific cohesion and friction angle data from laboratory tests, applying a factor of safety of 3.0 for dead plus live loads. Settlement estimates use elastic theory with modulus values calibrated to local Prince George till stiffness.
Frost Protection and Drainage Design
The foundation design includes a frost-depth compliance check per NBCC Table C-2 and a drainage detail that keeps the footing base at least 1.8 m below finish grade. Where shallow bedrock prevents reaching that depth, we design rigid insulation wings to prevent frost penetration.
Construction Inspection and Fill Verification
During excavation we log the bearing stratum to confirm it matches the geotechnical baseline. We conduct field density tests on engineered fill and proof-roll observations to verify that the subgrade achieves the specified compaction before reinforcing steel is placed.
Frequently asked questions
What is the typical cost range for a shallow foundation design report in Prince George?
For a standard residential or light commercial project in Prince George, the geotechnical investigation and foundation design report typically falls between CA$2.330 and CA$4.260. The final cost depends on the number of test pits or boreholes required, the laboratory testing program, and whether the site is in a known problem area such as the Nechako River floodplain.
How deep do footings need to be in Prince George to avoid frost heave?
The NBCC 2020 specifies a frost penetration depth of 1.8 meters for Prince George. We place the bottom of the footing at or below this depth unless the bearing stratum is shallow bedrock. When bedrock is less than 1.8 m deep, we protect the footing with extruded polystyrene insulation extending horizontally from the foundation to prevent frost from reaching the underside of the footing.
Can you design a shallow foundation if the site has organic soil or fill?
If the organic layer or uncontrolled fill is thin and localized, we can excavate through it and replace the material with engineered, compacted granular fill verified by Proctor testing. For thicker deposits, we often recommend removing the compressible material entirely or switching to a deep foundation solution. The decision depends on the thickness of the poor soil and the sensitivity of the structure to total and differential settlement.