Assuming the Edwards limestone is shallow across the whole site. That assumption has delayed more excavation schedules in Austin than any contractor wants to admit. The local geology flips fast—hard caprock on one corner, stiff Taylor clay on the other, and a gravel seam nobody logged during the initial desktop review. Our monitoring program catches those surprises before they become stop-work orders. We track lateral movement, pore pressure, and settlement in real time. For cuts deeper than 15 feet near Barton Creek or Bull Creek, the City’s drainage criteria kick in hard. Combining inclinometer arrays with a targeted CPT test clarifies the transition zones between weathered rock and intact limestone. On tight downtown lots, surface settlement points tied into a retaining wall monitoring plan keep the adjacent historic masonry from cracking. The data flows into daily reports, not just a final PDF. If movement exceeds the threshold, the team on-site gets a call before the next concrete truck arrives.
Inclinometer deflection at the excavation base rarely tells the whole story—the settlement trough 30 feet behind the wall is where the real risk hides.
Methodology and scope
Local considerations
A 15-story mixed-use on West 5th Street hits a limestone pinnacle six feet higher than the boring logs suggested. The contractor switches to a hydraulic breaker without adjusting the shoring sequence. Within 48 hours, the inclinometer at the east wall shows 0.8 inches of cumulative deflection, and three optical prisms on the 1920s brick building next door register 0.3 inches of settlement. The City of Austin Development Services Department issues a correction notice. What could have been a one-day recalibration of the excavation bench turns into a two-week stand-down because nobody correlated the vibration data with the movement data in real time. That’s the scenario a properly instrumented site avoids. Threshold alarms trigger a review meeting, not a crisis meeting. On Austin’s clay-rich sites, the risk compounds after a heavy rain: perched water loads the back of the wall and the passive resistance zone softens. A single standpipe observation well is not enough. The combination of VW piezometers, inclinometer profiles, and surface settlement arrays creates a three-dimensional picture that the geotechnical engineer can act on within hours.
Regulatory framework
ASTM D6230-21 (inclinometer monitoring), ASTM D7299-20 (vertical inclinometer probe), ASCE 7-22 Chapter 33 (excavation safety), IBC 2021 Section 3304 (protection of adjacent structures), City of Austin TCM 5.2.0 (trench safety)
Other technical services
Deep Excavation Instrumentation Package
Inclinometer casing, VW piezometers, and automated total station prisms deployed for cuts deeper than 20 feet. Daily reporting with trend analysis. Covers the full excavation cycle from initial cut through backfill.
Adjacent Structure Protection Monitoring
Optical prisms on neighboring foundations, crack gauges on historic masonry, and vibration monitors during rock breaking. Thresholds calibrated to ASCE 7 damage classifications. Real-time alerts to the GC and structural engineer.
Groundwater and Pore Pressure Monitoring
Standpipe piezometers and VW transducer strings installed in boreholes targeting perched water zones above the Edwards Limestone or within gravel lenses. Data correlated with rainfall records from LCRA gauges for long-term trend analysis.
Typical parameters
Frequently asked questions
How much does excavation monitoring cost for a typical Austin site?
How often are the instruments read during active excavation?
During shoring installation and bulk excavation, the automated total station cycles every 15 to 30 minutes. Inclinometer profiles are taken manually once per day at minimum, or twice daily if the cut advances more than five vertical feet in a shift. VW piezometers log continuously and transmit readings every hour. The frequency steps down during lag periods—weekends, holidays, or curing windows—but the system stays live 24/7.
What triggers an alarm and what happens when it goes off?
Alarm thresholds are set during the pre-construction baseline survey, typically one inch of cumulative lateral movement or half an inch of differential settlement on an adjacent structure. When a sensor crosses the 80-percent warning envelope, the system sends an automated email and SMS to the project’s contact list. At 100 percent, a phone call follows within five minutes. The daily report includes a movement vector plot and a recommendation: continue with increased observation, slow the excavation sequence, or pause and convene a review meeting with the shoring designer.
Does the monitoring plan need City of Austin approval?
The instrumentation plan is typically submitted as part of the building permit package under IBC Section 3304 when the excavation exceeds 12 feet or when adjacent structures are within the zone of influence. The City’s Development Services Department reviews the monitoring thresholds and the protection-of-adjacent-properties narrative. For public right-of-way impacts, Austin Transportation Department requires a separate street occupancy permit with real-time settlement monitoring on the pavement and utilities. We coordinate the submittal package with the structural engineer of record.
