MASW / VS30 Testing in Visalia — Shear Wave Velocity for Seismic Site Class

Visalia sits roughly 15 miles from the Sierra Nevada foothills in California’s Central Valley, a region where deep alluvial deposits shape every construction decision. The 2019 Ridgecrest sequence rattled windows across Tulare County, reminding owners and engineers that seismic risk isn’t confined to the coast. For a commercial building or school project here, determining site class with a MASW / VS30 survey converts guesswork into a defensible design parameter. Our crew runs the survey directly on your parcel — no heavy drilling, no spoils — and delivers a shear wave velocity profile that feeds straight into ASCE 7 ground motion calculations. When soft silts or shallow groundwater complicate interpretation, we often pair the results with a CPT test to verify stratigraphy at depth.

Vs30 is not just a number — it’s the single parameter that can change your seismic design category and structural cost by a full letter grade.

Scope of work in Visalia

A typical scenario plays out on the east side of town near the St. Johns River floodplain. A developer plans a two-story medical office, and the geotechnical report flags potential Site Class E or F conditions. Running a 115-foot active MASW spread across the building pad takes about 90 minutes. We use 24-channel seismographs with 4.5 Hz geophones, stacking hammer blows on a steel plate to generate a clean Rayleigh wave train. Dispersion curves are inverted with a solid genetic algorithm, producing a 1D Vs profile down to 100 feet. From there we extract Vs30 — the average shear wave velocity in the top 30 meters — and assign the IBC site class. The whole process, from field setup to signed report, wraps in under a week. For larger industrial parcels near Highway 99, the method scales efficiently without the access constraints of a drill rig. On sites with thick unsaturated sand, grain size analysis helps us correlate velocity to density trends and refine the liquefaction screening.
MASW / VS30 Testing in Visalia — Shear Wave Velocity for Seismic Site Class
MASW / VS30 Testing in Visalia — Shear Wave Velocity for Seismic Site Class
ParameterTypical value
Method standardASTM D4428 (crosshole reference) — MASW surface survey
Seismograph channels24-channel, 4.5 Hz vertical geophones
Vs30 depth interval0–30 m (average shear wave velocity per IBC / ASCE 7)
Investigation depth30–100 ft typical, deeper with longer spreads
Site class outputA (hard rock) through F (special study) per ASCE 7-22 Table 20.3-1
Data format1D Vs profile, 2D Vs cross-section, dispersion curves, raw SEG-2
Typical survey time60–120 minutes per array depending on line length

Local geotechnical conditions in Visalia

The Central Valley’s alternating drought cycles and flood events create a tricky near-surface environment for seismic measurements. Dry, cracked clay in August attenuates high-frequency Rayleigh waves, while saturated silt in February can mask the fundamental mode. In Visalia, where the water table swings from 10 to 40 feet seasonally, MASW data collected without checking pore pressure conditions can mislead the inversion and shift Vs30 by 15 percent or more. That difference is enough to bump a site from Class D to E, triggering more expensive foundation requirements. We schedule surveys with groundwater conditions in mind and run parallel seismic refraction lines when the velocity contrast is ambiguous. For structures classified as Risk Category III or IV — schools, fire stations, emergency operations centers — the IBC requires site-specific Vs30. Guessing the class from blow counts alone introduces unnecessary liability that no owner should carry.

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Applicable standards: ASCE 7-22 (Minimum Design Loads and Associated Criteria for Buildings and Other Structures), IBC 2021 Section 1613 — Site Class Definitions, ASTM D4428 / D4428M — Standard Test Methods for Crosshole Seismic Testing (reference for Vs profiling), NEHRP Recommended Seismic Provisions for New Buildings and Other Structures

Our services


Every Visalia project has a different footprint, schedule, and seismic exposure. Our service packages adapt to the specific requirements of your structural engineer and local building official.

MASW Survey for IBC Site Classification

Full 1D Vs profile with Vs30 calculation and site class letter assignment. Includes raw dispersion data and inversion report signed by our geophysicist.

2D Shear Wave Cross-Section

Multiple MASW arrays stitched into a continuous Vs cross-section, ideal for buildings with elongated footprints or variable subsurface conditions.

Combined MASW + Seismic Refraction

We run refraction alongside the surface wave survey to resolve velocity inversions and map the bedrock surface where it sits within 100 feet.

Liquefaction Screening Using Vs

Vs-based liquefaction assessment per Andrus & Stokoe methodology, correlating shear wave velocity to cyclic resistance ratio for clean and silty sands.

Top questions

What does a MASW survey cost for a single-family home lot in Visalia?

For a typical residential parcel within city limits, the survey runs between US$1,730 and US$3,260 depending on array length, number of lines, and whether we combine it with a shallow refraction profile. We provide a fixed quote after reviewing your parcel size and the structural engineer’s required depth.

Can MASW replace a borehole for site classification?

It can, and often does when the goal is strictly Vs30 and site class. The IBC accepts direct Vs measurement as the preferred method over blow-count correlations. However, if you also need soil samples for bearing capacity or chemical testing, then a borehole or test pit is still necessary.

How long does the field work take, and will it disrupt my site?

A single array takes about an hour to two hours. The equipment is surface-based — a seismograph, a cable spread, and a sledgehammer on a plate. No drilling mud, no cuttings, no heavy trucks. You can walk the site immediately after we coil the cable.

What is the difference between MASW and downhole seismic?

Downhole measures Vs directly in a cased borehole and gives excellent resolution, but it requires a drill rig and borehole access. MASW is non-invasive and averages over a larger volume of soil. Both produce a Vs profile; the choice depends on depth requirements, budget, and whether you already plan to drill.

Does the water table affect MASW results in the Central Valley?

It does, particularly when the saturation front is shallow. Water-saturated fine sands and silts can slow Rayleigh wave velocities and produce a low-velocity layer that complicates inversion. We account for this by measuring the water level on test pits or nearby wells and adjusting the inversion starting model accordingly.

Coverage in Visalia