PO
Peterborough Ontario
Peterborough Ontario, Canada

Standard Penetration Testing in Peterborough, Ontario

Peterborough’s growth from a lumber town on the Otonabee River to a regional manufacturing hub has left a patchwork of fill and natural deposits that complicate foundation design. Much of the city sits atop Paleozoic limestone of the Simcoe Group, yet the overburden—shaped by the Wisconsinan glaciation—varies from dense lodgement till in the east end to soft glaciolacustrine silts near Little Lake. When a developer proposed a mid-rise on Water Street, the borehole logs revealed six meters of compressible clay above the till, a sequence that required reliable blow counts to size footings and avoid differential settlement. Our team runs the Standard Penetration Test following ASTM D1586, delivering N-values that feed directly into bearing capacity models and liquefaction assessments under the National Building Code of Canada. For projects where continuous profiling is needed, we often pair SPT sampling with a CPT sounding to capture thin silt seams that split-spoon intervals might miss.

In Peterborough’s glaciated terrain, an uncorrected SPT N-value can overstate soil strength by 30 percent—hammer energy calibration is not optional.

Scope of work in Peterborough Ontario

Soil conditions shift noticeably between the west-end subdivisions near Trent University and the industrial corridor along The Parkway. West of the canal, weathered limestone residuum often gives N-values above 50 within three meters, making spread footings straightforward; east of the river, however, post-glacial Lake Jackson silts can yield N-values as low as 4 to 8 down to depths of seven or eight meters. This contrast means a single geotechnical assumption applied city-wide is a liability—what works on the drumlin at Fleming College will not hold in the floodplain south of Lansdowne Street. Our SPT program records depth, recovery, and blow count per 150-millimeter increment, flagging zones where the sampler encountered cobbles or boulders that skew the N-value. The data we deliver includes corrected N₆₀ values adjusted for overburden pressure and hammer energy, ready for input into the bearing capacity equations of the Canadian Foundation Engineering Manual.
Standard Penetration Testing in Peterborough, Ontario
Standard Penetration Testing in Peterborough, Ontario
ParameterTypical value
Test standardASTM D1586 / CSA A119.1
Sampler typeStandard split-spoon, 50.8 mm OD
Hammer systemSafety hammer with ER calibration
Driving energy measurementPile Dynamics PDM or similar
Sampling intervalEvery 1.5 m or at stratum change
Borehole diameter100–150 mm (hollow-stem auger)
Reported valuesN-field, N₆₀ (corrected), soil description

Demonstration video

Critical ground factors in Peterborough Ontario

The most frequent mistake we encounter on Peterborough sites is running SPT borings without energy calibration and then plugging raw N-values into liquefaction spreadsheets. A doughnut hammer on an old CME-45 rig can deliver as little as 45 percent of theoretical energy, which inflates blow counts and masks loose, potentially liquefiable sand lenses in the till. Under the NBCC 2020 seismic provisions, Peterborough falls within a moderate seismicity zone, and the glaciolacustrine sands mapped along the Otonabee valley warrant screening for cyclic softening if the water table is within three meters of grade. Skipping energy correction—or worse, terminating borings at six meters when the code requires investigation to ten meters for Seismic Category C structures—creates a compliance gap that no structural engineer can close after the fact.

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Applicable standards: NBCC 2020 — Seismic Hazard and Site Classification, CSA A23.3 — Design of Concrete Structures (foundation provisions), ASTM D1586 — Standard Test Method for SPT and Split-Barrel Sampling of Soils, Canadian Foundation Engineering Manual (CFEM), 4th Edition, ASTM D4633 — Energy Measurement for SPT

Our services

Our Peterborough SPT work is integrated into a broader geotechnical scope, ensuring that blow-count data is interpreted alongside complementary lab and field results.

SPT Borehole Drilling

Hollow-stem auger drilling to depths of 10 to 30 meters with split-spoon sampling at 1.5 m intervals, logged by an experienced geotechnical technician familiar with the Peterborough drumlin and spillway stratigraphy.

Energy-Calibrated SPT

Every rig run in the Peterborough area is instrumented with a load cell and accelerometer to record transferred energy, allowing us to report N₆₀ values corrected to 60 percent efficiency per ASTM D4633.

Liquefaction Screening Package

SPT data combined with grain-size distribution and Atterberg limits to run Seed-Idriss simplified procedure and Boulanger-Idriss (2014) triggering analysis for NBCC compliance.

Common questions

How much does SPT testing cost for a residential lot in Peterborough?

For a typical single-family residential site requiring one borehole to eight meters depth, the SPT investigation ranges from CA$710 to CA$1.120, including mobilization within the Peterborough urban area, hollow-stem auger drilling, split-spoon sampling at 1.5 m intervals, and a factual report with corrected N₆₀ values.

How many boreholes does the Peterborough building department require?

The City of Peterborough generally follows the Ontario Building Code, which references the CFEM for geotechnical scope. For a single-family dwelling, one borehole may suffice if subsurface conditions are uniform; for multi-unit buildings or lots with known fill, two to three boreholes are standard. We confirm requirements during the permit review stage.

What depth do you drill for SPT testing in the Kawarthas?

Borehole depth depends on the structure and soil profile, but in the Peterborough area we typically extend borings until refusal on limestone bedrock or to at least 1.5 times the foundation width below footing elevation. In the deeper till plains north of the city, 15 to 20 meters is common; near the Otonabee River, bedrock may be encountered at 3 to 6 meters.

Is SPT data enough to evaluate liquefaction risk on my site?

SPT N-values form the backbone of liquefaction screening under the NBCC 2020, but they should be supplemented with grain-size analysis and Atterberg limits to confirm the soil is susceptible. Sands with more than 15 percent fines behave differently from clean sands, and the SPT alone cannot provide that distinction. We package the SPT with lab testing to deliver a complete screening report.

Coverage in Peterborough Ontario