Plenty of contractors along the Virginia Peninsula assume if the ground looks firm today, it will hold tomorrow. That assumption falls apart fast in Hampton when seismic shaking hits saturated granular layers. The city sits on the Coastal Plain, where loose Quaternary sands and silts deposited by the ancestral James and York rivers create prime conditions for liquefaction. A standard bearing capacity check misses this entirely. The trigger is cyclic loading, and without a site-specific soil liquefaction analysis tied to SPT drilling blow counts and fines content, you are guessing. We see projects stall because the geotechnical report skipped this step and the building official asked the right question. Hampton’s proximity to the Chesapeake Bay also means groundwater is rarely deeper than 6 to 10 feet, keeping those loose layers saturated year-round. That is exactly the profile that makes a soil liquefaction analysis mandatory under IBC Section 1803.5.12 when mapped hazard exists.
In Hampton, a soil liquefaction analysis is not about maximum ground acceleration alone; it is about shallow groundwater and loose river-deposited sands working together against your foundation.



