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Prince George, Canada

Triaxial Test for Foundation Design in Prince George

The glacial till and glacio-lacustrine clays that dominate the Prince George basin present a real challenge for foundation design. The city sits at the confluence of the Fraser and Nechako rivers, at an elevation of about 575 meters, and the subsurface profile often shifts within a single block: dense, silty till over soft, normally consolidated clay. Shear strength parameters derived from a standard SPT correlation don't capture that variability accurately. We run triaxial tests to measure effective cohesion (c') and friction angle (φ') directly, because a pile group in College Heights and one in the Bowl area face completely different drainage conditions. The test also quantifies undrained shear strength (Su) for short-term loading, which is critical when excavation support is planned near the water table, typically found at just two to four meters depth in many parts of the city. When the project demands a precise modulus of elasticity for settlement prediction, we complement the triaxial program with in-situ permeability data to model the consolidation rate under the final structural load.

A single CU triaxial test with pore pressure measurement reveals more about a soil's true strength envelope than a dozen SPT correlations applied to Prince George's layered drift.

Methodology applied in Prince George

The Canadian Foundation Engineering Manual and ASTM D4767-20 set the standard for consolidated-undrained (CU) testing with pore pressure measurement, and in Prince George that methodology is especially relevant given the low-permeability silts that slow drainage. A consolidated-drained (CD) test, following ASTM D7181-20, gives us true effective stress parameters for long-term stability analysis, while an unconsolidated-undrained (UU) test per ASTM D2850-15 provides fast Su values for preliminary sizing. Our lab in the region runs these three modes routinely, applying back-pressure saturation to achieve Skempton B-values above 0.95. We've seen projects where the design moved from a deep foundation to a compensated mat after a CU triaxial campaign revealed higher than expected c' in the Nechako River floodplain deposits. For projects on the steeper slopes east of the city, we often pair the triaxial results with a slope stability analysis to verify the safety factor under rapid drawdown conditions. The test's stress path interpretation also feeds directly into the selection of stone columns as a ground improvement technique when the undisturbed strength is too low for shallow footings.
Triaxial Test for Foundation Design in Prince George
Triaxial Test for Foundation Design in Prince George
ParameterTypical value
Test modes (ASTM)UU (D2850), CU (D4767), CD (D7181)
Specimen diameter50 mm and 70 mm (undisturbed)
Saturation methodBack-pressure, Skempton B ≥ 0.95
Effective cohesion (c')Typically 0–15 kPa for local clays
Friction angle (φ')28°–36° in dense glacial till
Strain rate (CD/CU)0.05–0.5 %/h, adjusted for t100
Undrained strength (Su/σ'v)0.25–0.35 for NC silty clay
Pore pressure parameterĀ at failure, reported per specimen

Typical technical challenges in Prince George

The contrast between the Hart Highlands and the downtown Bowl is instructive. In the Hart, the glacial till is dense and overconsolidated; a UU test might suggest a Su of 150 kPa, and a shallow footing works. Down in the Bowl, the same formation is buried under five meters of soft, compressible clay where a CU test shows Su dropping to 40 kPa and φ' barely reaching 24°. A foundation designed on UU data alone—without the effective stress path from a CU triaxial—risks underestimating long-term settlement by 30 to 50 percent in the Bowl's normally consolidated soils. Skipping the drained test on a silt till that dilates during shear can also overpredict the bearing capacity, leaving the structure with a false sense of safety. We've seen the cost of a supplementary triaxial campaign run about half a percent of the foundation budget, while the cost of a failed excavation support in saturated Prince George clay can run into the hundreds of thousands.

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Applicable standards: ASTM D2850-15: Unconsolidated-Undrained Triaxial Compression Test on Cohesive Soils, ASTM D4767-20: Consolidated-Undrained Triaxial Compression Test, ASTM D7181-20: Consolidated-Drained Triaxial Compression Test, Canadian Foundation Engineering Manual, 4th Edition (CFEM), NBCC 2020, Structural Commentaries, Part 4

Our services

Triaxial testing is never a standalone exercise. We structure the laboratory program around the specific failure mechanisms that govern the project, combining the following services to deliver a complete strength and deformation profile.

Consolidated-Undrained (CU) with Pore Pressure

Measures effective stress strength envelope (c', φ') and excess pore pressure response. Essential for staged construction analysis and soft clay evaluation in Prince George.

Stress Path and Modulus Testing

Follows specific stress paths (e.g., K0 consolidation) to derive the Young's modulus and Poisson's ratio for FEM numerical models used in deep excavation design.

Unconsolidated-Undrained (UU) Quick Strength

Provides rapid undrained shear strength (Su) for preliminary design and quality control during earthworks, particularly useful for compacted fill verification.

Frequently asked questions

How much does a triaxial test program cost for a project in Prince George?

A typical triaxial testing program in Prince George ranges from CA$2,320 to CA$4,160, depending on the number of specimens and the test modes required. A three-specimen CU set with pore pressure measurement costs more than a single UU test, but the CU data often reduces foundation size and eliminates overconservatism, paying for the lab work several times over.

Which triaxial test type do I need for a foundation on the Prince George clay?

For the soft, normally consolidated clay found in the Bowl and near the river confluences, a consolidated-undrained (CU) test with pore pressure measurement is the standard choice. It yields the effective stress parameters needed for both short-term stability and long-term settlement analysis. If the load application is very slow relative to the soil's permeability, a consolidated-drained (CD) test may be specified instead.

How long does it take to get triaxial test results?

A standard CU triaxial test with three specimens takes about two to three weeks from sample extrusion to final report. The consolidation phase alone can require two to five days per specimen for the local silty clay, depending on the drainage path length. We provide preliminary Su values within a few days for urgent decisions.

Do you extract the soil samples for the triaxial test yourselves?

We coordinate directly with drilling crews operating in Prince George to obtain undisturbed Shelby tube samples. The tubes are transported to the lab in insulated containers to minimize disturbance. Before extrusion, we perform X-ray radiography on the tubes to select the most homogeneous sections, avoiding fissures and gravel lenses that would invalidate the test.

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