MASW & VS30 Shear Wave Velocity Surveys in Basildon

The stiff London Clay that underlies much of Basildon can be misleading. On a borehole log it looks competent, but its shear wave velocity often drops below 180 m/s in the weathered upper crust, pushing a site from class C to D under BS EN 1998-1. That single letter change can add tens of thousands to foundation costs. Our field crew has mapped this transition across the Craylands and Fryerns estates, where clayhead thickness varies from 1.2 to 4.5 metres over distances of less than a hundred metres. Combining test pits to confirm the weathering profile with the MASW line lets us anchor the inversion model to a physical boundary rather than relying on a blind best-fit algorithm.

A 15-metre MASW line across weathered London Clay can resolve the VS30 class boundary with greater spatial confidence than a single downhole seismic test.

Methodology applied in Basildon

The field setup we deploy across Basildon uses a 24-channel Geometrics Geode seismograph with 4.5 Hz vertical geophones spaced at two-metre centres, paired with a 12 lb sledgehammer source for the active shot and ambient noise recording for the passive array. The dual approach matters here because the Rayleigh wave dispersion curve needs to extend below 30 metres, and on the dense Bagshot Beds that cap the northern fringe of the borough a sledgehammer alone will not generate sufficient low-frequency energy. Running a linear array along the building footprint while simultaneously recording microtremor data from traffic on the A127 gives us a composite dispersion curve that holds coherence down to 0.8 Hz. The raw field records are processed through Park-Sebastian wavefield transformation with a 10% velocity increment, and the final VS30 is computed using the time-averaged travel path method specified in clause 4.2.2 of BS EN 1998-1:2004. Where the site straddles the boundary between the London Clay and the Thanet Sand Formation we cross-check the shear wave profile against a seismic refraction line to resolve the P-wave velocity contrast at the interface.
MASW & VS30 Shear Wave Velocity Surveys in Basildon
MASW & VS30 Shear Wave Velocity Surveys in Basildon
ParameterTypical value
Test standardBS EN 1998-1:2004, BS 5930:2015+A1:2020
Array configuration24-channel linear, 2 m receiver spacing
Source type12 lb sledgehammer (active) plus ambient microtremor (passive)
Geophone frequency4.5 Hz vertical component
Penetration depth (Vs profile)30 metres below ground surface (minimum)
Dispersion processingPark-Sebastian wavefield transform, 10% velocity increment
VS30 computation methodTime-averaged travel path per BS EN 1998-1 §4.2.2
Site class outputA, B, C, D or E per Table 3.1 BS EN 1998-1

Risks and considerations in Basildon

A residential developer on a sloping plot off Nethermayne encountered a VS30 value of 192 m/s on the upper terrace and 238 m/s at the toe of the slope, just 40 metres apart. The upper portion fell into class D while the lower portion reached class C, and the seismic coefficient for the foundation design varied by nearly 30% between the two building blocks. The site sat on the Lambeth Group transition where sandy silt lenses pinch out unpredictably. Running three parallel MASW lines at 10-metre spacing allowed us to contour the VS30 surface and position the retaining wall footing at the elevation where the design ground acceleration could be taken as uniform. On flat clay sites the risk is different: a uniform VS30 of 170-200 m/s often triggers a requirement for ground improvement that could have been avoided if the near-surface stiffness had been characterised more precisely. Combining the MASW data with in-situ permeability measurements in the upper two metres also informs the drainage design, because the weathered clay acts as a semi-confining layer that slows infiltration and concentrates runoff.

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Applicable standards: BS EN 1998-1:2004 (Eurocode 8, Part 1 – Seismic actions), BS 5930:2015+A1:2020 (Code of practice for ground investigations), BS EN 1997-2:2007 (Eurocode 7, Part 2 – Ground investigation and testing)

Our services

Every MASW survey we deliver in Basildon includes the VS30 site class determination, the full shear wave velocity versus depth profile, and a geophysical interpretation report that ties the velocity boundaries to the geological sequence logged in any available boreholes or trial pits on the site.

VS30 site classification survey

Active-source MASW line with passive microtremor array to measure the time-averaged shear wave velocity in the upper 30 metres. Deliverable includes the site class letter (A-E) per BS EN 1998-1 Table 3.1, the computed VS30 value, and the 1D Vs profile with depth.

Multi-line VS30 mapping

Two to five parallel or orthogonal MASW lines gridded across the building footprint to map lateral variation in VS30. Used where the site geology changes rapidly, such as the London Clay-to-Thanet Sand transition common in the Basildon area.

Combined MASW and seismic refraction

Simultaneous acquisition of Rayleigh-wave and P-wave refraction data along the same geophone spread. The refraction tomography constrains the shallow velocity model, improving the MASW inversion at depths above five metres where the dispersion curve is least constrained.

Common questions

How much does a MASW / VS30 survey cost for a typical Basildon site?

For a single-family residential plot or small commercial site in Basildon, a standard MASW survey with one active line and passive array recording typically ranges from £1,170 to £2,860, depending on the number of lines required, the site accessibility, and whether we need to combine the survey with a seismic refraction line or additional test pits for ground-truthing.

Why is VS30 site classification necessary for a building in Basildon when seismicity in the UK is low?

Although the UK is a low-to-moderate seismicity region, BS EN 1998-1 is a mandatory referenced standard under the UK Building Regulations for structures of consequence class CC2 and above. The VS30 value determines the elastic response spectrum used in the seismic design of the structure, and on soft clay sites the site amplification factor can exceed 1.4, which directly influences the base shear calculation and the foundation element sizing.

How long does a MASW survey take on site?

A single MASW line with active and passive acquisition typically takes 90 minutes to two hours of field time, including geophone planting, instrument calibration, hammer shots at multiple offsets, and 20 to 30 minutes of ambient noise recording. Multi-line surveys on larger Basildon sites are usually completed within a single working day.

What is the difference between a downhole seismic test and a MASW survey for VS30?

A downhole test measures the shear wave travel time directly in a borehole and gives a high-resolution velocity profile at a single point, whereas a MASW survey uses surface waves to produce a laterally averaged 1D velocity profile beneath the geophone spread. The MASW method is non-invasive, costs roughly a third of a downhole test, and covers a linear distance of 40 to 50 metres, which provides a more representative VS30 for the building footprint than a single borehole measurement.

Coverage in Basildon