OC
Ontario California, USA

Vibrocompaction Design: Ground Improvement in Ontario California’s Variable Soils

The biggest mistake we see in Ontario is treating the whole city like one uniform soil profile. Drive north toward the foothills and you hit dense alluvium. Move south toward the old agricultural belt and the sandy layers get loose. Really loose. We have tested sites where the SPT N-value drops below 8 at just 10 feet down. A standard shallow footing design on that soil fails differential settlement criteria fast. That is where vibrocompaction design changes the equation. We specify vibratory probe depth, grid spacing, and hold time based on site-specific stratigraphy. Not a generic chart. This work often runs parallel to a CPT test program to verify densification in real time, especially where silty fines blur the sand behavior. In Ontario, the water table can sit high during wet winters, and that changes the vibratory response. Our design accounts for that. It has to.

A 10 Hz change in vibrator frequency can double the densification radius in Ontario’s clean alluvial sands. The right frequency is never in a manual.

Technical details of the service in Ontario California

The equipment we mobilize to Ontario is a crawler-mounted vibrator with a 130 kW variable frequency drive and a 12-inch diameter probe. The probe penetrates under its own weight plus vibration. No jetting needed in most of our sands. We run frequency sweeps between 30 and 50 Hz to find the resonant column response of the soil. That response tells us more than any lab test. Once the sand column begins to collapse and densify, we hold the probe at target depth and monitor amperage draw. Amperage stabilizes. That is the signal. We then withdraw in controlled lifts and repeat. The process is simple in principle but punishing on equipment. For sites near the 60 freeway where background noise complicates surface settlement monitoring, we combine the vibro work with stone columns in transition zones where silt content exceeds 15 percent. The two techniques share the same rig platform in our operations.
Vibrocompaction Design: Ground Improvement in Ontario California’s Variable Soils
Vibrocompaction Design: Ground Improvement in Ontario California’s Variable Soils
ParameterTypical value
Applicable soil typesSands, silty sands, gravelly sands; fines content typically <15%
Maximum treatment depth75 ft (23 m) with standard rig; deeper with extensions
Vibrator power range130 kW to 180 kW, variable frequency 30-50 Hz
Probe diameter12 in (305 mm) standard; 16 in available for gravels
Typical grid spacing6 ft to 12 ft triangular or square pattern
Target relative density70% to 85% per ASTM D4253/D4254
Post-treatment verificationCPT, SPT, or PMT per IBC Section 1803

Critical ground factors in Ontario California

In Ontario, many older commercial sites sit on former agricultural land with undocumented fill. We have pulled vibro probes down and hit buried concrete, irrigation pipe, and once a buried pickup truck. That is not a joke. The geophysical survey is not optional here. Another pattern: the Santa Ana winds dry out the upper 3 feet of sand, creating a crust that looks competent in a shallow test pit. Below that crust, the sand is loose to a depth of 20 feet. If the vibrocompaction design assumes uniform density from the surface, the lower lifts never reach target density. We always run a MASW survey before finalizing the grid. It gives us a shear wave velocity profile that catches those hidden loose zones. The cost of skipping that step shows up as differential settlement five years later. Ontario building officials know the local geology, and they will ask for the pre- and post-treatment data.

Need a geotechnical assessment?

Reply within 24h.

Applicable standards: IBC Section 1803 (Geotechnical Investigations), ASCE 7-22 (Minimum Design Loads), ASTM D1586 (Standard Penetration Test), ASTM D2487 (Soil Classification), ASTM D4253/D4254 (Maximum and Minimum Index Density)

Our services

We provide vibrocompaction design as part of a broader ground improvement package. The three core services below reflect what Ontario projects most often need.

Vibrocompaction Design Package

Complete design including probe depth matrix, grid layout, frequency protocol, and lift schedule. Delivered with construction-phase observation and CPT verification.

Pre-Treatment Site Characterization

Geophysical surveys (MASW, seismic refraction) and intrusive testing (CPT, SPT) to map the subsurface before densification. Identifies fill, water table, and loose zones.

Post-Treatment Verification Testing

CPT soundings, SPT borings, and settlement monitoring to confirm the design achieved target relative density. Documentation for building official sign-off.

Questions and answers

What soil types in Ontario California respond best to vibrocompaction?

Clean sands and silty sands with fines below 12-15% respond best. Much of Ontario’s alluvial plain fits this description. Soils with more than 20% silt or any clay content require a different technique, usually stone columns or rigid inclusions. We run a grain size analysis on every project to confirm suitability before design begins.

How deep can vibrocompaction treat soil in this area?

Standard equipment reaches 75 feet. That covers most Ontario sites. With probe extensions and a more powerful vibrator, we can push to 100 feet. Depth matters because some of the loose sand deposits near the Santa Ana River corridor extend well below 40 feet. We match the probe length to the actual deposit thickness, not a budget assumption.

What is the typical cost range for vibrocompaction design and execution in Ontario?

Design alone typically ranges from US$1,280 to US$5,650 depending on site size and complexity. Full execution cost depends on grid spacing, depth, and access conditions. We provide a detailed estimate after reviewing the geotechnical baseline report and site constraints.

How do you verify that the ground improvement worked?

We run CPT soundings at the centroid of the treatment grid and compare them to pre-treatment data. The cone tip resistance should show a clear increase. We also run SPTs for correlation and sometimes pressuremeter tests for modulus. The IBC requires verification testing before foundation construction begins.

Does vibrocompaction work if the water table is high?

Yes, and sometimes it works better. Saturated sand liquefies temporarily under vibration, which helps the particles rearrange into a denser state. The key is controlling the vibration energy so the soil densifies rather than displaces laterally. Ontario’s winter water table is a factor we design for, not a problem we avoid.

Coverage in Ontario California