Overland Park sits on a complex mix of glacial till, shale, and limestone residuum that can shift from stiff clay to weathered rock within a few vertical feet. A soil mechanics study here has to account for the Pennsylvanian-age bedrock that underlies much of Johnson County, often masked by 10 to 25 feet of overburden. The team runs both disturbed and undisturbed sampling, then pushes each specimen through a full index and strength program so the numbers reflect what the ground actually holds. For projects near Turkey Creek or the Blue River tributaries, alluvial silts and soft clays appear fast, and the CPT test gives a near-continuous profile without losing the fines, while a MASW survey maps shear-wave velocity down to 100 feet for seismic site class determination per ASCE 7.
In Overland Park, the difference between a standard report and a useful one is knowing which shale beds drain freely and which ones hold pore pressure for weeks.
Methodology and scope
Local considerations
In Overland Park, we frequently encounter sites where the upper five feet look like stiff lean clay but grade into highly weathered shale that slakes within hours of exposure to air. A geotech who skips the slake-durability check or fails to log the transition zone can sign off on a bearing capacity figure that evaporates after the first wet-dry cycle. Another pattern that shows up repeatedly in the southern parts of the city is perched groundwater trapped at the till-bedrock interface: water doesn't flow freely, so pore pressure builds slowly and catches excavation crews off guard mid-week. The soil mechanics study addresses that by installing vibrating-wire piezometers in the borehole and monitoring for at least 72 hours — enough time to see whether the head stabilizes or keeps climbing. On commercial pads where settlement tolerance is tight, the lab also runs a staged triaxial on the lowest competent stratum to verify that the drained friction angle holds under the full design load.
Applicable standards
ASTM D1586-18 (Standard Penetration Test), ASTM D2487-17e1 (Unified Soil Classification System), ASTM D2435/D2435M-11(2020) (One-Dimensional Consolidation), ASCE 7-22 (Minimum Design Loads — seismic site classification), IBC 2021 Chapter 18 (Soils and Foundations)
Associated technical services
Subsurface Exploration & Sampling
Mud-rotary and hollow-stem auger borings logged by a field geologist. Shelby tubes, SPT split spoons, and bulk bags collected at depth intervals tied to the site stratigraphy.
Index & Classification Testing
Moisture content, Atterberg limits, grain size with hydrometer, and USCS classification per ASTM D2487. Every sample gets a full index card before strength work begins.
Strength & Consolidation Suite
Unconfined compression, direct shear, and one-dimensional consolidation. Triaxial testing added when the design requires drained friction angle or undrained shear strength under confinement.
Site Class & Foundation Report
Sealed report with Vs30 from MASW or downhole, bearing capacity recommendations, settlement estimates, and construction considerations for the specific Overland Park subgrade conditions.
Typical parameters
Frequently asked questions
How much does a soil mechanics study cost for a typical Overland Park residential lot?
For a standard single-family lot in Johnson County, a soil mechanics study generally runs between US$3,090 and US$4,940. The final number depends on the number of borings, whether consolidation or triaxial testing is required, and how deep the competent bearing stratum sits.
Which ASTM standards apply to a soil mechanics study in Kansas?
The core standards are ASTM D1586 for the Standard Penetration Test, ASTM D2487 for soil classification, and ASTM D2435 for consolidation. Seismic site class follows ASCE 7-22 Chapter 20, and the lab program typically includes ASTM D4318 for Atterberg limits and ASTM D3080 for direct shear.
How deep do borings need to go in Overland Park to satisfy the IBC?
IBC 2021 Section 1803 requires borings to extend through unsuitable material and at least 5 feet into competent bearing strata. In Overland Park, where shale bedrock often appears between 15 and 30 feet, we typically core 5 to 10 feet into the rock to confirm it is not just a boulder or a thin ledge, and we go deeper if the load is column-supported on drilled piers.
