I still remember a job near the old Jewellery Quarter where the client had assumed a straightforward strip foundation. The moment we opened a test pit at 1.8 metres depth, we hit a buried sandstone ledge that completely changed the bearing stratum. That’s the kind of surprise that only an exploratory test pit can catch before the excavator arrives. In Birmingham, with its mix of glacial tills, river terrace deposits, and made ground from centuries of industrial activity, seeing the soil profile with your own eyes is the most reliable way to start a foundation design. We typically excavate pits down to 3-4 metres using a backhoe, logging each horizon according to BS 5930, and taking bulk disturbed samples for laboratory classification. Before we break ground, we always coordinate with the client on utility clearance — that step is non-negotiable. The whole process usually takes half a day per pit, and we can have a preliminary log on your desk within 24 hours. For deeper profiles we complement the test pit with a georradar GPR survey to map buried obstructions before excavation.

A single test pit in Birmingham's made ground can reveal buried foundations, old cellars, or contaminated hotspots that no desk study will ever flag.
Scope of work in Birmingham
- Stratigraphy and layer thickness to ±5 mm
- Undrained shear strength with a pocket penetrometer
- Water ingress rate and perched water table depth
- Bulk density and moisture content from undisturbed block samples
Critical ground factors in Birmingham
The difference between a development in Moseley and one in the city centre is stark. In Moseley you typically find firm glacial till with a bearing capacity of 150-200 kPa; in the city centre you can hit 4 metres of made ground with old brick rubble, ash, and even buried cellars. That made ground is notoriously variable — one test pit might show competent fill, the next one 20 metres away hits a void. The biggest risk in Birmingham is not knowing what lies beneath the topsoil. An exploratory test pit is the only way to confirm the presence of uncontrolled fill, old foundations, or contaminated horizons before you commit to a foundation design. We always recommend a minimum of one test pit per 200 square metres of footprint, and at least two pits per building to capture lateral variability. For sites with suspected contamination, we coordinate with an environmental consultant to log any visual or olfactory evidence of hydrocarbons during excavation.
Our services
Alongside the standard exploratory test pit, we offer two complementary services that address common Birmingham ground conditions.
Test Pit with Infiltration Testing
When the project includes a soakaway or drainage field, we carry out a falling-head percolation test in the base of the pit. We measure the time for water to drop 75 mm and 25 mm, repeat the test three times, and report the infiltration rate in m/day. This is essential for sustainable drainage (SuDS) compliance in Birmingham's clay-rich soils.
Test Pit with Standpipe Installation
For sites where the water table is shallow — common in areas like the River Rea floodplain — we install a 50 mm diameter standpipe piezometer in the backfill. We monitor it for a minimum of 24 hours and provide a hydrograph showing the equilibrium water level. This data feeds directly into foundation design and any dewatering assessment.
Q&A
How deep can an exploratory test pit go in Birmingham?
In most Birmingham soils — glacial till, river terrace deposits, and made ground — we safely excavate to 3.0-3.5 metres. In competent Mercia Mudstone we can reach 4.0 metres with a tracked excavator. The limiting factor is usually groundwater or the presence of buried services. We always scan the area with a cable avoidance tool (CAT) before digging, and if we hit water-bearing sands we stop and install a standpipe.
What is the typical cost range for a test pit in the Birmingham area?
For a standard exploratory test pit to 3.0 metres depth including logging, sampling, and a preliminary report the cost is typically between £390 and £730 per pit. The variation depends on access constraints, the need for traffic management, and whether we need to backfill with imported material. We always provide a fixed price before mobilisation.
Do you need a test pit if you already have borehole data?
Yes, often. Boreholes give you a continuous profile but you don't see the soil structure — you rely on disturbed samples. A test pit lets you inspect the strata in situ, identify fissures, root holes, or old foundations, and take undisturbed block samples for laboratory testing. In made ground or variable glacial till, test pits and boreholes complement each other. We frequently use test pits to calibrate the borehole log.
How long does it take to get results from a test pit investigation?
We can provide a preliminary field log within 24 hours of excavation. The full factual report, including laboratory results (moisture content, Atterberg limits, particle size distribution), takes 5-7 working days depending on the number of samples. For urgent projects we can prioritise the lab work and deliver a draft report in 3 working days.