Soil Liquefaction Analysis in Bournemouth – BS 5930 & Eurocode 7 Assessments

Along Bournemouth's coast, the sand isn't just a tourist attraction. Beneath the promenades and cliffside developments, loose saturated deposits can behave unpredictably when ground motion hits. The town sits on a mix of Eocene sands (the Branksome Sand Formation) and Quaternary river terrace gravels, and the water table is rarely more than a couple of metres down. That combination—shallow groundwater plus granular soil—is exactly what gets flagged in a screening study. Developers working near the seafront or in the lower-lying parts of Boscombe quickly discover that standard bearing capacity checks aren't enough. A proper soil liquefaction analysis following BS EN 1998-5 procedures, supported by SPT drilling data, maps out where excess pore pressure could wipe out effective stress. Our team runs the numbers, cross-references the fines content from grain size tests, and delivers a report the local authority will actually accept.

Liquefaction doesn't just turn sand into soup—it can shift retaining walls and snap buried utilities, even on sites that look perfectly stable during construction.

Service characteristics in Bournemouth

The risk profile changes noticeably as you move inland. Properties near the clifftop in Westbourne sit on denser, drier material that rarely triggers a liquefaction concern, whereas a site two hundred metres away, tucked behind the beach huts near Bournemouth Pier, can be sitting on loose hydraulic fill over natural sand. We pull the borehole logs, check the standard penetration resistance, and then run a Youd-Idriss (2001) simplified procedure to calculate the factor of safety against liquefaction at each layer. Where the SPT N-values drop below 15 in clean sand, the analysis will often flag a credible hazard even for a moderate design earthquake. When we need a continuous profile without disturbing the fabric of the soil, we pair the investigation with a CPT test, which gives us sleeve friction and pore pressure readings in one pass. The report then ties the safety factors to post-liquefaction settlements and lateral spreading potential, two issues that can crack a raft foundation or sever service connections long before the ground stops shaking.
Soil Liquefaction Analysis in Bournemouth – BS 5930 & Eurocode 7 Assessments
Soil Liquefaction Analysis in Bournemouth – BS 5930 & Eurocode 7 Assessments
ParameterTypical value
Investigation methodsSPT (BS EN ISO 22476-3), CPT (BS EN ISO 22476-1), shear-wave velocity
Analysis frameworkBS EN 1998-5:2004 (Eurocode 8 Part 5) + NCEER/Youd-Idriss simplified procedure
Key input parametersN₁₆₀, fines content (FC), plasticity index (PI), groundwater level, PGA
Output metricsFactor of safety (FSL), liquefaction potential index (LPI), post-liquefaction settlement
Secondary checksLateral spreading displacement, bearing capacity degradation, flow failure screening
Ground investigation depthTypically 20–30 m bgl, extended where deep sand layers are present
Laboratory supportGrain size distribution (BS 1377-2), Atterberg limits, moisture content

Typical technical challenges in Bournemouth

Skip the study and you gamble with a mechanism that leaves almost no warning signs before construction. The borehole rig hums away, the split spoon sampler comes up with what looks like firm sand, and the contractor pours footings. Then, during a seismic event—even a modest one—the pore water pressure spikes, the sand loses its grip, and the structure settles unevenly. In Bournemouth, where many coastal sites are on gently sloping ground, lateral spreading toward the shore can pull apart foundations horizontally. The cost to remediate after the fact, with grouting or deep soil mixing, dwarfs the price of a desktop screening study done early. A BS 5930-compliant investigation, interpreted by an engineer who understands the local geology, is the difference between a building that rides out the shaking and one that sinks into the ground.

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Applicable standards: BS 5930:2015+A1:2020, BS EN 1998-5:2004 (Eurocode 8 Part 5), BS EN ISO 22476-3 (SPT), BS EN ISO 22476-1 (CPT), BS 1377-2 (Laboratory classification), NCEER Workshop (Youd & Idriss, 2001)

Our services

The analysis package is built around the specific geology of the Bournemouth area, from the Branksome Sand to the Poole Formation clays. We tailor the scope to what the planning officer and the NHBC warranty provider will ask for.

Level 1 Screening Study

Desk-based review of published geology, groundwater records, and site proximity to known loose sand deposits. Delivers a go/no-go decision within a week for straightforward plots.

Field Investigation & SPT/CPT Logging

Mobilisation of a tracked rig to carry out standard penetration tests or cone penetration tests at the site. Every blow count is correlated against the fines content measured in the lab.

Numerical Liquefaction Analysis

Layer-by-layer calculation of cyclic stress ratio, cyclic resistance ratio, and factor of safety. Post-liquefaction settlement and lateral spread displacement are estimated using empirical charts.

Foundation Design Implications Report

A concise document that translates the analysis into practical recommendations—pile depth, ground improvement triggers, or bearing capacity reduction factors for shallow foundations.

Common questions

Does every Bournemouth site need a liquefaction assessment?

No. Sites on the London Clay or the Poole Formation clays north of the railway line are generally exempt under the simplified Eurocode 8 criteria. However, any plot within 500 m of the coast, or on mapped river terrace gravels underlain by saturated sand, will almost always trigger a screening requirement. We check the borehole records first and only recommend a full analysis when the ground profile meets the criteria for potentially liquefiable soil.

What is the typical cost range for a liquefaction study in Bournemouth?

A complete package—desk study, two or three boreholes with SPTs, laboratory classification, and the numerical analysis report—typically runs between £2,240 and £2,920 for a standard residential plot. The final figure depends on access constraints, depth of investigation, and whether CPT is required alongside SPT.

How long does the analysis take from instruction to final report?

The field work is usually done in one to two days. Laboratory tests take five to seven working days, and the analysis and reporting require another week. Overall, you should budget three to four weeks from instruction to receiving the signed report, provided the weather allows the rig onto the site.

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