In Tempe, the biggest variable isn't just the heat—it's the water table under the Salt River corridor. We've pulled samples from sites along Rio Salado Parkway where saturated fine sands sit less than 10 feet down. That combination of shallow groundwater and loose alluvium puts a hard requirement on liquefaction analysis under ASCE 7-16 Section 11.8. Before a structural engineer stamps foundation plans here, the city plan reviewer will ask for a site-specific seismic hazard report. We handle that process from the first SPT borehole to the final factor of safety calculation. For deeper profiling in gravelly zones we sometimes pair fieldwork with a CPT test to get continuous tip resistance where split-spoon blow counts get erratic.
A clean sand with N=6 at 12 feet below groundwater in Tempe doesn't just fail a factor of safety check—it's a construction-phase risk that needs a mitigation plan before the grading permit is issued.
Scope of work in Tempe Arizona

Risks and considerations in Tempe Arizona
We reviewed a 3-story mixed-use project near Arizona Mills where the initial geotech report flagged a 12-foot layer of SM sand with N-values below 8—classic cyclic liquefaction potential. The contractor had already budgeted for shallow spread footings, but the numbers didn't work: post-liquefaction settlement estimates exceeded 3 inches differential under the design earthquake. That triggers a mandatory mitigation review per IBC 1803.5.12. The fix was a ground improvement package using vibrocompaction before we came back with post-treatment SPT verification. It added four weeks to the schedule but zero surprises during construction—exactly how it should be. Ignoring the liquefaction risk in Tempe's alluvial basin doesn't save money; it just moves the cost to a much more expensive phase.
Our services
Our Tempe liquefaction work covers the full chain from field investigation to mitigation design parameters:
Deep SPT Boreholes
Hollow-stem auger drilling to 50 feet with SPT sampling every 2.5 feet; groundwater measurement and soil logging per USCS standards.
Liquefaction Triggering Analysis
Cyclic stress ratio vs. cyclic resistance ratio calculations for each sample; factor of safety profiles for design PGA levels per ASCE 7.
Post-Liquefaction Settlement Estimates
Volumetric strain integration for each liquefied layer; total and differential settlement predictions for foundation performance.
Mitigation Design Parameters
Stone column or vibrocompaction target densities; post-treatment verification testing protocols with acceptance criteria.
Quick answers
What triggers a mandatory liquefaction study in Tempe?
The IBC 2021 requires it when the site class is E or F with saturated loose sands and the mapped Ss exceeds 0.15g. Most Tempe parcels south of the Salt River meet that threshold. The city's engineering department enforces this at the grading permit stage—you won't get a foundation permit without the report.
How many boreholes do we need for a typical Tempe commercial lot?
For a standard 1-acre commercial parcel, we recommend two deep SPT boreholes to 50 feet minimum, spaced to capture variability across the building footprint. If the site straddles an old river channel, we add a third boring. The Maricopa County reviewer will expect borehole logs that bracket the planned foundation area.
What does a liquefaction analysis cost in Tempe?
A complete package—drilling, lab testing, and the engineering report—typically runs between US$2,830 and US$4,030 depending on depth, number of borings, and whether we need to add geophysical methods like MASW. Site access and traffic control on arterial roads can shift the mobilization cost.
Can you handle the mitigation design too?
Yes. Once we quantify the liquefaction depth and settlement, we provide performance-based specifications for vibrocompaction, stone columns, or rigid inclusions. We also write the post-treatment verification plan so your contractor has clear pass/fail criteria for the re-test SPT program.