A 24-channel seismograph laid out across a limestone bench on the west side of Austin captures more than just Rayleigh wave dispersion. The array records phase velocity that shifts with frequency as the signal penetrates the Glen Rose Formation, the Walnut Clay, and eventually the competent Edwards Limestone beneath. Our field crew deploys 4.5 Hz geophones at 2-meter spacing with a 10-kg sledgehammer source, stacking three to five impacts per shot point to suppress ambient noise from nearby highway traffic—a constant challenge when surveying within the Balcones Fault Zone where the transition from hard rock to expansive clay can occur across a single residential lot. Data processing runs through the full f-k transform and spatial autocorrelation routines, extracting fundamental-mode dispersion curves that we invert iteratively to build a shear wave velocity profile down to 30 meters. That VS30 value determines whether the site falls into Site Class C, D, or occasionally B under ASCE 7-22 Chapter 20, which directly governs the seismic design category for the structure. In many Austin subdivisions straddling the contact between the Edwards Plateau and the Blackland Prairie, we have measured VS30 varying from 280 m/s to over 900 m/s within 500 feet, a contrast that carries real implications for base shear calculations and foundation cost.
VS30 is not a layer velocity—it is a travel-time-weighted average over the top 30 meters that masks velocity inversions. We report both the VS30 and the full velocity profile because the inversion controls the site period.
Methodology and scope
Local considerations
Austin’s expansion through the 1990s and 2000s pushed development across the Balcones Escarpment, where the stratigraphic column can change from hard Cretaceous limestone to highly plastic Taylor Group clay within the footprint of a single building pad. Using a single VS30 value borrowed from a regional map—even the USGS 1-km grid—misses these sharp lateral gradients that we have documented on multiple commercial sites along Loop 360 and FM 2222. The practical consequence: a structure designed for Site Class C that actually sits on Site Class D conditions may be under-designed for seismic demand by 30% or more in terms of base shear coefficient. The IBC 2021 and the City of Austin Building Criteria require site-specific shear wave velocity measurement when Site Class F conditions are suspected or when the default classification would be conservative. Our MASW surveys on the Del Rio Clay in southeast Austin have returned VS30 values as low as 210 m/s, pushing the site firmly into Class D territory and triggering the need for liquefaction assessment where the groundwater table is within 15 meters of grade. For structures assigned to Risk Category III or IV—schools, fire stations, emergency operations centers—the difference between an assumed and a measured VS30 carries code-mandated consequences for the seismic design parameters.
Regulatory framework
ASTM D4428/D4428M-14: Standard Test Methods for Crosshole Seismic Testing, ASCE/SEI 7-22 Minimum Design Loads – Chapter 20: Site Classification Procedure, IBC 2021 Section 1613: Earthquake Loads – Site Class Definitions, and NEHRP Recommended Seismic Provisions (FEMA P-2082) – VS30 Site Classification.
Other technical services
VS30 Site Classification Survey
Single- or multi-line active MASW survey with 24-channel acquisition, dispersion curve extraction, and iterative inversion to produce the VS30 value and NEHRP Site Class (A–F). Includes annotated shot gathers, phase-velocity spectra, and the 1D shear wave velocity profile.
2D Shear Wave Velocity Cross-Section
Multi-line MASW arrays processed into a 2D Vs cross-section for sites with lateral heterogeneity. Useful for cut-and-fill transitions, fault zones, and sites where a single VS30 value misrepresents the subsurface variability across the building footprint.
Combined MASW + Refraction Package
Integrated acquisition of MASW and seismic refraction along the same spread to simultaneously constrain Vp and Vs. The Poisson ratio profile derived from both velocities aids in distinguishing saturated from dry zones and identifying rippability limits in limestone.
Typical parameters
Frequently asked questions
What does a MASW survey cost for a standard Austin residential lot?
For a single-family lot under 0.5 The final number depends on access constraints—sites on steep slopes in the Westlake area or with heavy tree cover require additional line preparation—and on whether the City of Austin requires a second orthogonal line for redundancy.
How deep does the MASW method actually measure shear wave velocity?
The depth of investigation is controlled by the longest wavelength of surface waves that can be generated and recorded with the array. With a 2-meter geophone spacing and a 46-meter spread, the maximum resolvable wavelength is approximately 40–50 meters, which allows us to sample down to roughly one-half to one-third of that wavelength, or about 20–30 meters. For VS30 calculation we need at least 30 meters of profile, and we extend the inversion slightly beyond that depth to avoid truncation artifacts.
Can MASW be performed on paved surfaces or inside existing buildings?
MASW works best on bare ground because the geophones need firm coupling with the soil. On asphalt or concrete pavement we can drill small pilot holes through the pavement to plant the geophones in the subgrade, though this adds time and cost. Inside finished buildings the method is generally impractical because the rigid floor slab introduces complex guided-wave modes that contaminate the dispersion image, and the confined space limits the spread length needed for 30-meter penetration.
What is the difference between VS30 and the shear wave velocity of a specific layer?
VS30 is a travel-time-weighted harmonic mean of the shear wave velocity over the top 30 meters, not the velocity of any single layer. It is calculated by dividing 30 meters by the sum of the travel times through each layer within that depth interval. A thin, very soft layer near the surface can reduce VS30 significantly even if the deeper material is competent rock—this is common in east Austin where 3 meters of stiff clay overlying limestone can produce a VS30 of 350 m/s while the limestone itself has a Vs exceeding 1,200 m/s.
How long does it take to receive the final VS30 report?
Field acquisition for a single-line MASW survey on an accessible Austin site takes approximately 2 to 3 hours including setup, testing, and breakdown. Raw data processing—dispersion curve picking, inversion, and quality control—requires another 4 to 6 hours in the office. The final signed report with the 1D Vs profile, VS30 calculation, and NEHRP site class is typically delivered within 3 to 4 business days after fieldwork.
