In Hamilton, we often see pavement failures that have nothing to do with traffic loading and everything to do with what lies beneath the chip seal. The Waikato Basin deposits—soft pumice silts, peat lenses, and alluvial clays—can turn a straightforward road job into a maintenance headache within two seasons. Our team works directly with civil contractors and consulting engineers across Hamilton to build defensible pavement designs from the subgrade up. That means running soaked CBR tests on the actual formation material, not relying on assumed values. We also pull CBR road testing data into the design sequence so the pavement cross-section matches the site, not a generic table out of NZTA M/4. Whether it is a new subdivision off River Road or a heavy-duty yard at the Te Rapa logistics hub, we deliver the soil parameters that make the mechanistic-empirical model work.
Pavement design in Hamilton stands or falls on the soaked CBR value—everything else in the structural number equation flows from that single, site-specific number.
Methodology applied in Hamilton

Demonstration video
Typical technical challenges in Hamilton
The geology under Hamilton is dominated by the Hamilton Ash Formation—a sequence of weakly cemented volcanic airfall deposits that can lose significant strength when saturated. Coupled with the Waikato River's historical floodplain deposits, the city has extensive areas where the high water table sits less than a metre below the surface in winter. A pavement section designed without accounting for this perched groundwater will pump fines up through the sub-base within the first wet season. Rutting, crocodile cracking, and edge break appear, and suddenly the asset life drops from 25 years to a painful 8. The NZTA M/4 catalogue assumes free-draining subgrade conditions, so the design has to be adjusted locally. If the drainage path is blocked by impermeable ash layers, the pavement becomes a bathtub, and the granular layers degrade from the bottom up.
Our services
We handle the geotechnical side of flexible pavement design for the range of project scales that Hamilton throws at us: from residential cul-de-sacs to heavy-vehicle access ways. Here is how we support the design team.
Subgrade investigation & CBR testing
DCP transects and laboratory-soaked CBR tests across the formation alignment. We map the spatial variability so the designer can zone the pavement cross-section, not average it.
Mechanistic-empirical design input
We provide the resilient modulus and subgrade stiffness parameters required for Austroads layered-elastic analysis, calibrated against site-specific DCP data.
Groundwater & drainage assessment
Standpipe monitoring over seasonal cycles to establish the design water table. Essential for Hamilton sites near the Waikato River or the peat lakes.
Construction compliance testing
Field density, Benkelman beam deflection, and proof-rolling verification during construction to confirm the finished pavement meets the design intent.
Frequently asked questions
What makes flexible pavement design different in Hamilton compared to other North Island cities?
The Hamilton Ash Formation and the shallow groundwater are the two big differentiators. The volcanic silts can lose up to 60% of their bearing capacity when saturated, so a soaked CBR test is non-negotiable here, whereas in Auckland's weathered greywacke you might get away with an estimated value. The design has to explicitly handle sub-surface drainage, which is less demanding in free-draining pumice country further south.
How much does a geotechnical investigation for a flexible pavement in Hamilton cost?
Do you follow the NZTA M/4 catalogue or the Austroads mechanistic method?
We support both. For straightforward low-volume roads, the M/4 catalogue is efficient and accepted by Hamilton City Council. For high-ESA industrial pavements or sites with marginal subgrade, we recommend the Austroads mechanistic-empirical method because the catalogue assumptions about subgrade drainage and material quality often do not hold on Hamilton's soft ash soils.
How deep do you investigate for a pavement design?
We generally go to at least 2.5 metres below the finished subgrade level or 1.5 times the total pavement depth, whichever is deeper. In Hamilton's peat-fringe areas around the lakes, we often go deeper with machine-dug test pits to confirm there is no buried organic layer that would consolidate and create differential settlement under the pavement.