Laboratory CBR Testing in Norwich | BS 5930 & Eurocode 7 Compliant

Norwich's medieval street pattern and historic core conceal a complex glacial and post-glacial geology that demands rigorous site investigation. The city sits on a plateau of Cretaceous chalk overlain by Anglian glacial till, with the river valleys of the Wensum and Yare cutting through softer alluvial silts. For any new road, car park, or commercial hardstanding in postcodes NR1 through NR8, the bearing capacity of the subgrade is rarely uniform. A laboratory CBR test, performed on remoulded or undisturbed samples, provides the definitive measure of soil strength that pavement engineers need to avoid premature rutting. While field assessment gives a preliminary indication, only a controlled laboratory CBR test under BS 5930 : 2015 procedures can deliver the repeatable soaked CBR values that feed directly into the design catalogues in HD 26/06 of the Design Manual for Roads and Bridges. We process samples collected from boreholes advanced with spt drilling to correlate penetration resistance with laboratory-measured bearing capacity, ensuring the pavement design accounts for the worst-case saturated conditions typical of Norfolk winters.

A soaked laboratory CBR value below 2 percent on Norwich alluvium can demand complete subgrade replacement, a cost that rigorous upfront testing is designed to quantify and control.

Methodology applied in Norwich

The application of Eurocode 7 (BS EN 1997-2 : 2007) in Norwich requires careful interpretation of the region's variable drift deposits. Laboratory CBR testing here must replicate the moisture regime of the boulder clay matrix, which can soften dramatically when drainage is inadequate. Our test program follows the methodology detailed in BS 1377-4 : 1990, using a 4.5 kg rammer and a 2.5 kg surcharge mass to simulate overburden pressure on compacted specimens. We measure penetration resistance at intervals of 0.25 mm up to 7.5 mm, comparing the load-penetration curve against the standard 13.24 kN reference value. For projects on the Norwich Crag formation, where sands can be silty and prone to migration, the soaked CBR value often drops by 40 percent or more from the as-compacted state. This is why we condition specimens for 96 hours under water before testing, a step that some rushed site investigations omit but which is critical for long-term pavement performance. When the formation level exposes chalk, a plate load test may supplement the CBR data to verify stiffness at a larger scale, but the core design parameter remains the soaked laboratory CBR value.
Laboratory CBR Testing in Norwich | BS 5930 & Eurocode 7 Compliant
Laboratory CBR Testing in Norwich | BS 5930 & Eurocode 7 Compliant
ParameterTypical value
Test standardBS 1377-4 : 1990
Compactive effort2.5 kg rammer, 62 blows per layer (heavy) / 27 blows (light)
Soaking period96 hours submerged
Surcharge mass2.5 kg annular weights
Penetration rate1.27 mm/min
Specimen diameter152 mm (CBR mould)
Reference load (2.5 mm)13.24 kN
ReportingCBR % at 2.5 mm and 5.0 mm penetration

Local geotechnical conditions in Norwich

A recurring mistake in the Norwich area is designing pavement foundations based on CBR values from samples compacted at natural moisture content without a full soak cycle. The boulder clay across much of Norfolk behaves acceptably when dry but loses significant strength once groundwater rises during a wet winter. Contractors who skip the 96-hour soak prescribed by BS 1377-4 end up with an overestimated subgrade modulus, leading to asphalt layers that are too thin and a pavement that begins to show fatigue cracking within the first three years. The cost of a laboratory CBR test is negligible compared to the expense of excavating and replacing a failed pavement under traffic management on a constrained urban site like those along Dereham Road or near the inner ring. Another error is attempting to infer CBR from particle size distribution alone on the heterogeneous Lowestoft Till; this formation contains chalk clasts and lenses of sand that make correlation unreliable, so direct mechanical testing is the only defensible approach. We also recommend a companion grain size analysis to flag frost-susceptible silts that can exacerbate weakening during freeze-thaw cycles.

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Applicable standards: BS 5930 : 2015 (Code of practice for ground investigations), BS EN 1997-2 : 2007 (Eurocode 7 — Ground investigation and testing), BS 1377-4 : 1990 (Compaction-related tests), HD 26/06 (DMRB — Pavement foundation design), SHW Series 600 (Specification for Highway Works — Earthworks)

Our services

Our Norwich laboratory supports the full pavement foundation design chain, from sample recovery to design CBR determination. Each service is calibrated to the specific requirements of East Anglian geology and local authority adoption standards.

Soaked Laboratory CBR

Three-point compaction with 96-hour soak to determine CBR at target dry density for flexible pavement design on local glacial till.

CBR Swell Measurement

Monitoring of specimen heave during saturation, a key indicator for the expansive potential of weathered chalk and plastic clay horizons found across the Norwich area.

Moisture Condition Value (MCV)

Rapid assessment of earthworks acceptability, often run alongside CBR specimens to confirm that fill material from Norwich sites meets end-product specification.

Design CBR Derivation

Statistical reduction of raw CBR results to a characteristic design value in accordance with IAN 73/06, accounting for spatial variability across the site.

Questions and answers

How much does a laboratory CBR test cost in Norwich?

A single-point soaked laboratory CBR test, including compaction to a specified dry density and the full 96-hour soaking cycle, typically falls between £100 and £190 depending on whether a three-point series is required and how quickly results are needed.

How long does it take to get CBR results for a project near the A47?

The soaking period alone is 96 hours, and with specimen preparation, compaction, penetration testing, and reporting, a standard turnaround is seven to eight working days. We can provide an interim unsoaked value earlier if the project programme demands it, but the soaked result remains the design-critical figure for Norfolk County Council adoption.

Can CBR testing be done on chalk subgrades in Norwich?

Yes, but with care. The Upper Chalk beneath Norwich can degrade to a soft putty when remoulded and saturated, producing CBR values below 3 percent. We test chalk as a remoulded specimen at the moisture condition expected post-construction, and we always report the saturation state so the designer can assess the risk of further softening over the pavement's life.

Coverage in Norwich