In Whitby, the interaction between Lake Ontario’s shoreline deposits and deeper glacial till creates a subsurface profile that demands careful seismic evaluation. We see too many projects where the initial geotechnical report skips a detailed liquefaction screening, assuming the dense Halton Till at depth solves everything. It doesn’t. The upper layers of loose sandy silts and the high groundwater table—often just 2 to 3 meters below grade near the 401 corridor—are exactly the conditions where cyclic mobility can trigger during a moderate earthquake. Before you commit to a shallow foundation design, a proper CPT test with pore pressure measurement gives you the continuous stratigraphic profile needed to identify these thin, potentially liquefiable seams that an SPT alone might miss. Whitby’s growth in residential subdivisions and mid-rise commercial projects along Dundas Street makes this analysis not just a code checkbox, but a real financial safeguard against post-seismic settlement claims.
Liquefaction in Whitby isn’t just a theoretical exercise—loose saturated sands at shallow depth can settle 2 to 4 inches under a design earthquake, cracking slabs and severing utilities.
Technical details of the service in Whitby

Typical technical challenges in Whitby
Undetected liquefiable layers in Whitby’s coastal plain have led to differential settlements exceeding 75 mm in past regional seismic events—enough to render a building structurally compromised. The biggest mistake we see is relying on a single deep borehole that hits the competent till and calling the site “non-liquefiable.” The problem lies in lateral variability: a 1.5-meter-thick lens of poorly graded sand between 4 and 6 meters depth can exist 15 meters away from the borehole, invisible to a sparse investigation grid. During the design earthquake, this lens loses shear strength, the overlying crust breaks up, and you get localized bearing failure under the footings. The financial exposure isn’t just the repair cost—it’s the business interruption, the insurance premium hike, and the reputational damage when tenants can’t occupy the building for six months. A thorough analysis with an adequate density of CPT soundings eliminates this blind spot.
Our services
We structure the liquefaction analysis around the specific needs of your Whitby project—whether it’s a single lot custom home near Lynde Creek or a multi-building commercial plaza in Brooklin. The scope scales, but the technical rigor doesn’t.
Site-Specific Liquefaction Hazard Assessment
Full simplified procedure analysis using field SPT/CPT data, including fines content correction, magnitude scaling factor for the Western Quebec source, and a layer-by-layer factor of safety calculation. We deliver a clear yes/no on liquefaction triggering and a probabilistic settlement estimate.
Ground Improvement Design for Liquefaction Mitigation
When the analysis shows unacceptable risk, we design the mitigation—stone columns, vibrocompaction, or deep soil mixing—to achieve the target post-treatment SPT N-value or CPT tip resistance. Includes performance verification testing plan.
Frequently asked questions
Does NBCC 2020 require a liquefaction analysis for my Whitby building?
Yes, if your site is classified as Site Class D, E, or F with saturated granular soils and the seismic hazard exceeds the trigger threshold. NBCC 2020 Sentence 4.1.8.16 directs you to assess liquefaction potential. Most sites in Whitby with sand or silt above the water table fall into this category.
How much does a liquefaction analysis cost for a typical Whitby residential lot?
A complete analysis, including the necessary CPT soundings and the engineering report, typically ranges from CA$3,530 to CA$5,620 depending on the number of test locations and the depth of investigation. The field work cost dominates, so a larger lot with more variability pushes toward the upper end.
What’s the difference between an SPT-based and a CPT-based liquefaction analysis?
The CPT provides a continuous profile of tip resistance and sleeve friction, allowing detection of very thin (sub-100 mm) liquefiable seams that an SPT can easily miss due to its 1.5-meter test interval. CPT also measures pore pressure directly, giving you a more reliable assessment of the in-situ stress state.
Can you use the existing borehole data from my Whitby geotechnical report?
Sometimes. If the report includes SPT N-values with hammer energy correction and the borehole logs clearly describe the soil’s fines content, we can run a preliminary screening. However, if the data is older than 5 years or lacks groundwater measurements from the spring high-stand, we strongly recommend supplementary CPT soundings.