The coastal moisture regime of Balbriggan, with its 750 mm of annual rainfall and persistent salt-laden winds off the Irish Sea, creates a unique challenge for geotechnical design: pore pressure response. In fine-grained deposits near the harbor and along the Bracken River, the effective stress state isn't merely an academic concept. It dictates whether a foundation will hold. A triaxial test under consolidated-undrained (CU) conditions reveals exactly how the soil skeleton behaves when saturated—information that a simple shear vane cannot provide. For the Ardgillan Castle quarter and the new residential expansions off Hamlet Lane, we pair triaxial data with atterberg limits to classify the low-plasticity silts that dominate the area. This combination lets the structural engineer lock in the correct bearing capacity without overdesigning the footing dimensions.
A single CU triaxial test on a Balbriggan silt can replace three empirical correlations and prevent a bearing capacity failure before the first brick is laid.
Methodology applied in Balbriggan

Risks and considerations in Balbriggan
In Balbriggan, one of the most overlooked failure mechanisms sits right along the coastline. The intertidal zone near the Martello Tower presents silty sands that look firm at low tide but become nearly liquefiable when saturated. A total stress (UU) triaxial test might show a false sense of safety because it ignores pore water pressure buildup. We insist on effective stress testing—CU with pore pressure measurement—for any structure within 200 meters of the mean high water mark. Without it, you risk a bearing capacity failure during a winter storm surge when the groundwater table rises. The 2018 flood event on Hampton Street demonstrated how quickly surface water can saturate shallow foundations. A triaxial-derived effective friction angle, plugged into a seepage-coupled model, is what separates a resilient design from a recurring insurance claim.
Our services
Our triaxial testing program for Balbriggan projects covers the full range of loading conditions, from rapid construction on low-permeability clays to long-term drained analysis of sandy fills. Each test is tailored to the specific stratigraphy encountered on site.
CU Triaxial (Consolidated Undrained)
The standard for Balbriggan clay and silt. Measures effective friction angle and undrained shear strength with pore pressure monitoring. Essential for slope stability and foundation bearing capacity analysis.
CD Triaxial (Consolidated Drained)
Slow shear rate test for free-draining sands and gravels found in the Barnageeragh area. Determines the drained friction angle for long-term settlement predictions under structural loads.
UU Triaxial (Unconsolidated Undrained)
Quick total stress test for preliminary site investigations in Balbriggan. Used to estimate the undrained shear strength of cohesive fills before detailed CU testing begins.
Stress Path & Advanced Testing
Custom triaxial programs that replicate the in-situ stress history. Useful for deep excavations near the railway embankment where the sequence of loading and unloading dictates the soil stiffness.
Frequently asked questions
How much does a triaxial test cost for a Balbriggan site investigation?
A standard single-specimen CU triaxial test typically ranges between €1.940 and €2.770, depending on the required confining pressure range and specimen preparation complexity. A full three-specimen suite to define the Mohr-Coulomb envelope is more economical per test. The exact cost depends on whether the samples are remolded or high-quality undisturbed cores from the Balbriggan site.
What sample quality is needed for a reliable triaxial test in Balbriggan clay?
Undisturbed Class 1 samples are essential for effective stress testing. In Balbriggan’s soft alluvial silts, thin-walled Shelby tubes pushed with a steady, continuous stroke minimize sample disturbance. Our lab inspects every tube for signs of swelling or air entry before extrusion. For the glacial till, block sampling yields the most reliable specimens.
Which triaxial test type is correct for a retaining wall near the Balbriggan harbor?
For a retaining wall exposed to tidal fluctuations, a CU test with pore pressure measurement is mandatory. This gives the effective friction angle and the undrained shear strength. The design must account for rapid drawdown conditions, which reduce the effective stress and can trigger a slip circle failure in the backfill.