Too many foundation designs in Trois-Rivières still assume the ground beneath will stay put during a seismic event. That assumption fails hard in this city. The deep Champlain Sea clay deposits interbedded with loose silty sands are classic liquefaction candidates. A standard site investigation without a targeted soil liquefaction analysis misses the mechanism that turns solid ground into a heavy liquid. We see it in the Saint-Louis-de-France sector and near the Saint-Maurice River banks: clean sands with a high water table, exactly the condition that triggers cyclic mobility during a moderate quake. For projects within the Charlevoix-Kamouraska seismic zone influence, the NBCC 2020 requires a site-specific assessment. That means running stress-based simplified procedures and knowing when to advance the evaluation with CPT testing for continuous soil behavior type profiling.
Liquefaction in Trois-Rivières is not a theoretical risk. The 5.4 magnitude Val-des-Bois event in 2010 was felt here, and the local marine clay with sand lenses would behave differently today.
Methodology applied in Trois-Rivieres

Critical ground factors in Trois-Rivieres
The freeze-thaw cycle in Trois-Rivières adds another layer of complexity many engineers overlook. The ground freezes to about 1.5 meters every winter. When it thaws in April, the upper soil layers become temporarily saturated and loose. A spring construction start on a site with marginal liquefaction resistance can see settlement issues before the structure is even out of the ground. Combine this seasonal softening with the regional seismicity from the Western Quebec Seismic Zone, and a soil layer that passed a summer investigation might fail a re-assessment under spring groundwater conditions. We always recommend scheduling the field investigation for late spring, when the pore pressure profile is at its most critical. This timing gives you the most conservative and therefore safest design parameters for your foundation or ground improvement scope.
Our services
Our liquefaction assessment deliverables are structured for direct use by your structural engineer and the municipality. We don't just hand over a report. We provide the input files for your finite element model.
Site-Specific Liquefaction Hazard Assessment
Complete field-to-report program including SPT or CPT data acquisition, laboratory index and cyclic strength testing, and calculation of the factor of safety and post-liquefaction settlements for every critical layer.
Ground Improvement Design Review
If the native soil fails the liquefaction trigger, we design the mitigation. This includes vibratory densification, stone columns, or rigid inclusion grids. We then verify the improvement with post-treatment CPT testing and re-run the liquefaction model to confirm performance.
Frequently asked questions
What is the typical cost range for a liquefaction study in Trois-Rivières?
For a complete assessment involving field drilling, laboratory cyclic testing, and a signed engineering report, the investment typically falls between CA$3,190 and CA$5,450. The final number depends on the number of boreholes and whether CPT is used alongside SPT.
Is Trois-Rivières in a high seismic zone?
Trois-Rivières sits within the Western Quebec Seismic Zone. While not as active as the Charlevoix region, it experiences frequent low-to-moderate magnitude events. The National Building Code assigns a non-zero PGA value here, making a site-specific soil liquefaction analysis mandatory for post-disaster buildings and high-occupancy structures.
How deep do you investigate for liquefaction potential?
We typically investigate to 20 meters, and often to 30 meters, below the proposed foundation level. The critical granular lenses in Trois-Rivières are commonly found between 4 and 15 meters depth. Stopping at 15 meters can miss deeper, loose deposits that contribute significantly to total settlement.
Which laboratory tests are required for the analysis?
Beyond standard index testing, we require cyclic triaxial or cyclic direct simple shear tests on undisturbed samples. These provide the cyclic resistance ratio (CRR) of your specific soil. We also run high-precision fines content and Atterberg limits to classify the soil behavior type and apply the correct liquefaction triggering correlation.
What happens if my site fails the liquefaction assessment?
A failed assessment doesn't stop the project. It defines the mitigation scope. We design ground improvement solutions like vibrocompaction or stone columns to densify the loose layers. We then retest the site and recalculate the factor of safety. The goal is always to make the site buildable with a quantifiable performance target.