Victoria BC grew from a Hudson's Bay Company outpost in 1843 into a dense coastal capital perched on complex glacial and marine sediments, and that history still shapes every excavation today. The city's development pushed from the rocky Fairfield slopes onto the soft clays of the James Bay lowlands, where different foundation behaviors demand a rigorous soil mechanics study before any shoring or structural load is committed. Our laboratory processes borehole samples from these distinct formations to quantify consolidation potential, undrained shear strength, and seismic response under the Cascadia Subduction Zone hazard. For deeper profiles common in the Uplands area, we combine routine borehole logging with a CPT test to capture continuous tip resistance and pore pressure data without the disturbance that sampling introduces in sensitive silts.
A soil mechanics study on Victoria's glaciomarine clay must separate true cohesion from apparent suction—skip that and the factor of safety becomes guesswork.









