A four-story mixed-use project off West Pembroke Avenue hit a wall during excavation: twelve feet of soft, highly compressible silty clay with organic content typical of the Tidewater coastal plain. The structural engineer had already sized the footings assuming stiff subgrade, but the boring logs told a different story. Hampton sits on the Yorktown Formation and overlying Quaternary sediments deposited by the James and York river systems, and when the water table sits less than five feet below grade—as it does across much of the city's 136 square kilometers—conventional over-excavation becomes a costly gamble. Stone column design offers a ground improvement path that reinforces the weak zone from the bottom up, increasing composite shear strength while creating a drainage network that accelerates consolidation. Before committing to deep foundations, the project team paired a CPT test to map the soft layer continuously with a triaxial shear program on undisturbed samples to calibrate the area replacement ratio needed for the column grid.
A well-designed stone column grid can cut total settlement by half compared to untreated ground—provided the area replacement ratio is calibrated to the actual consolidation curve of the native soil.



