Anyone building near Wollongong's coastline or its older alluvial flats needs to think about what happens when the ground shakes. AS 1726 gives us the framework, but what really matters is reading the local geology – the quartz sands in the Illawarra, the old creek beds buried under Port Kembla, the silts near Lake Illawarra. A proper soil liquefaction analysis here isn't just about ticking a box. It's about knowing whether your site will hold up when the next big one hits. We run the SPT blow counts, grab the fines content, and feed it all into a Seed & Idriss evaluation that actually reflects conditions on your block in Wollongong. If the water table is high – and it often is within a few hundred metres of the beach – the risk profile changes fast. We also cross-check with the local seismic hazard maps from Geoscience Australia so the numbers match the real hazard, not a generic assumption.
A clean sand that drains well in the lab can still liquefy in the field – what matters is the pore pressure response under cyclic shear, and that's what we measure.
Site-specific factors
Wollongong's growth from a coal port to a modern coastal city means we're building on land that was once swamp, dune, or tidal flat. A lot of the flat ground between the escarpment and the sea – think around Coniston, Port Kembla, and parts of Warrawong – sits on Quaternary sediments that include loose, water-saturated sands. These materials didn't matter much for single-storey weatherboard cottages a century ago. But now, with multi-storey apartments and industrial sheds carrying heavy crane loads, a soil liquefaction analysis isn't optional. The site class can shift from C to E once liquefaction potential is confirmed, and that changes your seismic design category under AS 1170.4. If the boreholes hit a loose layer at 4 metres and nobody checks it, the cost of not knowing is a foundation that tilts or settles differentially after a moderate earthquake.
Quick answers
How much does a soil liquefaction analysis cost in Wollongong?
For a typical residential or light commercial site in Wollongong, budget between AU$4,360 and AU$7,260. The range depends on access, number of boreholes, and whether we run CPTu alongside SPTs. A site on the escarpment with shallow rock costs less; a deep alluvial site near the harbour runs higher.
Is Wollongong at high risk for liquefaction compared to Sydney?
Parts of Wollongong sit on looser Quaternary sands and have a higher water table than much of the Sydney Basin. The seismic hazard is also slightly elevated due to proximity to the Illawarra escarpment fault structures, so yes, certain suburbs have a higher relative risk.
Do I need a liquefaction study for a single house?
It depends on the site class and the soil profile. If the boreholes show loose saturated sand within 10 metres of the surface and the house is more than two storeys, most Wollongong Council geotechnical reviewers will flag it and ask for a screening analysis under AS 1170.4.
What happens if my site fails the liquefaction check?
We don't walk away – we quantify the risk and present ground improvement options. That could be vibro-compaction, stone columns, or switching to a piled foundation. The analysis gives the structural team a clear factor of safety and settlement estimate so they can design around it.