Santa Ana expanded rapidly after the 1950s, transforming from agricultural land into one of Orange County's densest urban cores. Much of its original soil profile consists of young alluvial deposits and older terrace materials, with the Santa Ana River cutting through the western edge. Understanding the subgrade behavior under repeated traffic loads is essential for any flexible pavement design in the city. The team integrates local geological maps and site-specific boring logs to define the California Bearing Ratio (CBR) and resilient modulus before moving to structural design. This prevents premature fatigue cracking and rutting on local streets and arterial roads alike. Before specifying asphalt thickness, the geotechnical investigation often includes a CBR vial test to confirm design values and a geotechnical road study to assess drainage conditions.

A CBR below 3 in wet season conditions can increase required asphalt thickness by up to 40%, raising project costs significantly.
Scope of work in Santa Ana
Risks and considerations in Santa Ana
A common mistake by local contractors is skipping the subgrade moisture conditioning phase during the wet season. When the subgrade is compacted one day and heavy rain saturates the base the next, the effective CBR drops sharply, yet the flexible pavement design was based on the dry value. The result is premature structural failure within 2-3 years. The team always includes a worst-case moisture scenario in the analysis, using soaked CBR tests and resilient modulus testing under saturated conditions, so the final design accounts for Santa Ana's seasonal rainfall patterns.
Our services
The laboratory offers a complete suite of tests to support flexible pavement design, from soil classification through structural layer characterization.
Subgrade Strength Evaluation
CBR testing in both soaked and unsoaked conditions, resilient modulus determination via repeated load triaxial, and Atterberg limits classification. Results are delivered with AASHTO layer coefficient recommendations.
Asphalt Mix & Base Layer Design
Marshall stability and flow tests on hot-mix asphalt, gradation analysis of aggregate base, and compaction curves for each layer. The report includes structural number calculation and recommended thicknesses per ESAL class.
Q&A
What is the difference between CBR and resilient modulus in flexible pavement design?
CBR measures the penetration resistance of compacted soil under controlled conditions, giving a static strength index. Resilient modulus (Mr) simulates repeated traffic loading and captures the elastic behavior of the subgrade under dynamic stress. For Santa Ana projects, Mr is preferred for MEPDG designs, while CBR is used for the AASHTO 1993 empirical method.
How much does a flexible pavement design study cost in Santa Ana?
The cost typically ranges between US$1,840 and US$5,890, depending on the number of test pits, laboratory tests (CBR, Proctor, gradation), and the complexity of the structural analysis. A full report with layer thickness recommendations is included.
What happens if the subgrade CBR is below 3 in Santa Ana's alluvial soils?
When CBR falls below 3, the subgrade cannot support the traffic loads without excessive deformation. The solution usually involves removing and replacing the top 30-50 cm with imported granular material, or stabilizing the in-situ soil with lime or cement to raise the effective CBR to at least 5 before proceeding with flexible pavement design.