The high-damping rubber bearings and sliding pendulum isolators we specify for Prince George projects aren't off-the-shelf components. Each unit is modeled against the specific ground motion parameters that govern this part of north-central British Columbia. Prince George sits in a moderate seismic hazard zone under the NBCC 2020, but the deep glacial till and lacustrine clay deposits that underlie much of the city can amplify ground shaking in ways that a generic design won't capture. Our approach starts with a site-specific response spectrum, factoring in the Fraser River basin sediments and the proximity to the Rocky Mountain Trench fault systems. For critical facilities in Prince George, this hardware becomes the single most important line of defense against structural damage during a design-level earthquake. Pairing the isolator selection with a seismic microzonation study clarifies the subsurface variability across different neighborhoods, while a liquefaction assessment rules out bearing capacity loss in silty zones near the Nechako River.
Base isolation in Prince George isn't about eliminating all motion; it's about controlling drift to keep a building functional when the ground beneath it moves a different way.
Methodology applied in Prince George

Demonstration video
Typical technical challenges in Prince George
The ground conditions between the Hart Highlands and the downtown Bowl area of Prince George are fundamentally different, and that difference changes how an isolation system performs. The Hart sits on well-drained, compact glacial till with relatively high shear wave velocities; the Bowl, closer to the confluence of the Fraser and Nechako rivers, rests on thicker sequences of compressible silts and clays. A base isolation design calibrated for the till might underestimate the long-period displacement demands that develop on the softer basin soils. Without a site-specific geotechnical investigation that feeds directly into the nonlinear time-history analysis, you risk an isolator reaching its displacement limit and transferring the full seismic force into the structure—exactly the outcome you paid to avoid. We also map the moat wall clearance requirements against the predicted maximum displacement plus an adequate safety margin, because an impact against the retaining wall defeats the purpose of decoupling the building from the ground.
Our services
The scope of base isolation work in Prince George extends well beyond specifying a product from a catalog. We deliver a coordinated package that connects geotechnical reality with structural performance goals.
Site-Specific Response Spectrum and Ground Motion Selection
We develop a design spectrum anchored to the NBCC 2020 uniform hazard spectrum for Prince George, then select and scale a suite of at least seven recorded ground motion pairs that match the site's magnitude-distance scenarios and local soil amplification characteristics.
Nonlinear Time-History Analysis with Isolation System Modeling
Full 3D structural models incorporating the nonlinear hysteretic behavior of lead-rubber or friction pendulum isolators; we verify displacement demands, residual drift, and uplift potential under MCE-level shaking for Prince George site conditions.
Peer Review and Construction Phase Testing
Coordination with EGBC-registered peer reviewers familiar with northern BC seismicity, plus oversight of prototype and production testing of isolators to confirm conformance with specified stiffness, damping, and low-temperature performance parameters.
Frequently asked questions
What type of base isolation system works best for the soil conditions we have in Prince George?
The choice between lead-rubber bearings and friction pendulum sliders depends on the site-specific soil profile. In Prince George, where we often encounter stiff till over softer lacustrine deposits, the period elongation of the softer soils can favor a hybrid system: sliding isolators to handle large displacements with low residual drift, combined with lead-rubber units for supplemental damping. The final configuration comes out of a parametric study that compares at least three candidate systems against the design spectrum derived from the NBCC 2020 hazard values for the city.
How long does a base isolation design and peer review process take for a mid-rise building?
For a typical 4- to 6-story institutional or commercial building in Prince George, the design and peer review cycle spans approximately 10 to 14 weeks. This includes site-specific ground motion selection, nonlinear modeling iterations, isolator property optimization, and a formal peer review by an EGBC-registered engineer with seismic isolation experience. Procurement and prototype testing of the isolators run on a parallel track and can add 8 to 12 weeks depending on the manufacturer's schedule.
Does base isolation eliminate the need for a deep foundation?
Not automatically. The isolation plane sits between the foundation and the superstructure, so the foundation system still needs to handle vertical loads and any pre-isolation lateral demands. In Prince George, where competent till is often reachable at moderate depth, we frequently pair isolators with a stiff mat foundation or large-diameter piles depending on the bearing stratum depth. The piles design is done in parallel with the isolation system to ensure compatibility of stiffness and settlement criteria.
What does base isolation seismic design cost for a project in Prince George?
The engineering design and peer review scope for base isolation on a mid-rise building in Prince George typically falls between CA$5,700 and CA$11,180, depending on the complexity of the structural system, the number of isolator types needed, and the extent of the nonlinear time-history analysis required by the NBCC 2020 and the peer reviewer's scope of work. This fee covers the full design package, ground motion selection, modeling, and coordination through construction-phase testing.
Will an isolated building in Prince George survive the maximum considered earthquake without damage?
The design objective under the NBCC 2020 for a seismically isolated structure is life safety with the potential for immediate occupancy after the design earthquake, not a guarantee of zero damage. Under the maximum considered earthquake (MCE), the isolation system is designed to accommodate the full displacement demand without failure, and the superstructure is expected to remain essentially elastic. Non-structural components should remain functional, though some minor cosmetic cracking in partition walls is possible. The key deliverable is that the building remains safe and operational when a fixed-base equivalent would likely suffer significant structural damage.