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Soil Liquefaction Analysis in Corpus Christi: Screening, SPT-Based Assessment & Mitigation Guidance

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The soil profile east of Oso Creek tells a completely different story than what you find out toward Calallen. Closer to the bay, you are dealing with saturated loose sands and silty deposits laid down by the Nueces River floodplain and coastal processes, while the western terraces sit on older, overconsolidated clays. This contrast matters enormously when a project triggers a seismic site class determination under ASCE 7. In the downtown marina district and along North Beach, the groundwater table often sits within five feet of grade, which immediately raises the liquefaction screening flag during a Phase II investigation. We run the analysis using SPT blow counts corrected for fines content per the NCEER/Youd-Idriss framework, because a raw N-value without the fines correction can overstate the factor of safety in silty sands common to Corpus Christi's barrier island and bay margin geology. For deeper stratigraphy or when the client needs a continuous profile without disturbing the sample, we coordinate with a CPT test program to get tip resistance and sleeve friction data that feeds directly into the Robertson-based liquefaction triggering correlations, which are less sensitive to operator variability than SPT hammer energy.

Applying the fines content correction to SPT blow counts in Corpus Christi's silty bay sands often moves the factor of safety from below 1.0 to above 1.3, changing the entire mitigation strategy.

Methodology and scope

A recent project on North Padre Island Drive involved a three-story medical office building where the geotechnical report initially flagged the upper 18 feet as clean sand with an SPT N60 below 12. That combination in a seismic design category C site gets your attention fast. We pulled the split spoon samples from the shelby tubes and ran a full grain size distribution in the lab. It turned out the material had 22 percent fines passing the #200 sieve, which shifted the cyclic resistance ratio upward once we applied the fines content correction from the NCEER workshop proceedings. Without that laboratory step, the analysis would have called for ground improvement that the soil did not actually need. Our approach ties the field index testing directly to the grain size analysis so the triggering curves reflect the real gradation, not an assumed clean sand model. The corrected CSR-CRR comparison gave a factor of safety above 1.3 for the design earthquake, and we closed the liquefaction hazard without a mitigation recommendation, saving the owner the cost of stone columns or deep soil mixing.
Soil Liquefaction Analysis in Corpus Christi: Screening, SPT-Based Assessment & Mitigation Guidance
Technical reference image — Corpus Christi

Local geotechnical context

The semi-tropical humidity along the Texas Gulf Coast means the vadose zone in Corpus Christi stays thin year-round. Between the Laguna Madre evaporation patterns and the hurricane season recharge, the shallow groundwater regime barely fluctuates more than three feet annually in the Flour Bluff and Padre Island corridors. That persistent saturation keeps the effective stress low in the upper sand lenses, so a moderate earthquake on the Mexia-Talco fault zone could trigger excess pore pressure faster than the drainage path can dissipate it. The secondary hazard is lateral spreading along the ship channel bulkheads and any natural slope toward Oso Bay, where a gentle one-percent incline is enough to accumulate several inches of permanent displacement under liquefied conditions. We map these free-face geometries during the site reconnaissance and feed the surveyed slope angles into the empirical displacement models from Youd et al. (2002), because ignoring a two-foot drop over a hundred-foot run can leave a foundation slab cracked even if the bearing capacity failure never fully develops.

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Technical data

ParameterTypical value
Screening threshold (IBC/ASCE 7)Groundwater ≤ 50 ft depth + loose sand with N60 < 15
SPT hammer energy calibration60% energy ratio (N60), per ASTM D1586-18
Fines content correction methodNCEER Workshop (Youd-Idriss 2001) with FC from ASTM D2487
CPT-based triggering (when applicable)Robertson & Wride (1998), normalized by Ic
Peak ground acceleration referenceUSGS NSHM for 2,475-year return period, site class adjusted
Post-liquefaction settlementCalculated per Zhang et al. (2002) volumetric strain method
Lateral spreading displacementEmpirical models (Youd et al. 2002) for free-face and sloping ground

Related services

01

SPT-Based Liquefaction Triggering

Standard penetration test analysis with hammer energy correction to N60, fines content adjustment per NCEER guidelines, and cyclic stress ratio calculation for the design peak ground acceleration at the site. We deliver a boring-by-boring factor of safety table for the upper 50 feet.

02

Post-Liquefaction Settlement & Lateral Spreading

Volumetric strain estimation using the Zhang et al. (2002) method correlated to SPT and CPT data, plus free-face and sloping ground displacement calculations under the Youd empirical framework for the Corpus Christi bayfront geometry.

03

Ground Improvement Feasibility Assessment

When the factor of safety falls below the project threshold, we evaluate vibrocompaction, stone columns, or deep soil mixing applicability based on the grain size envelope and the required post-treatment density, providing the design team with target SPT N-values for verification.

Regulatory framework

ASCE 7-22 Chapter 11 & 20 (Seismic Design & Site-Specific Procedures), IBC 2021 Section 1613 (Earthquake Loads), ASTM D1586-18 (Standard Test Method for Standard Penetration Test), ASTM D2487-17 (Standard Practice for Classification of Soils for Engineering Purposes), NCEER Workshop Recommendations (Youd & Idriss, 2001)

Questions and answers

At what depth does IBC require liquefaction screening for a Corpus Christi site?

The IBC references ASCE 7, which triggers a liquefaction evaluation when the groundwater table is within 50 feet of the ground surface and the soil profile contains loose to medium-dense sands with an SPT N60 below 15 blows per foot. In Corpus Christi's bay margin areas, the water table is often encountered at 3 to 8 feet, so the screening applies to virtually any project east of the Oso Creek drainage divide.

What is the typical cost range for a liquefaction analysis tied to an SPT drilling program?
Can you evaluate liquefaction using CPT soundings instead of SPT borings?

Yes. CPT-based triggering using the Robertson and Wride normalized soil behavior type index is often more repeatable in the low-confinement upper 15 feet where SPT hammer energy variability can be high. We run both methods when the project stratigraphy includes thin silt seams that are difficult to capture with a split spoon sampler.

How do you account for the fines content in Corpus Christi's silty sands?

We perform a full wash-sieve analysis on every split spoon sample flagged for liquefaction assessment, determining the percent passing the #200 sieve per ASTM D2487. That fines content is applied to the NCEER recommended correction curves that shift the cyclic resistance ratio upward, which is especially important for the silty sand facies common in the Nueces River alluvium and the barrier island washover deposits.

Location and service area

We serve projects across Corpus Christi and surrounding areas.

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