Birmingham's temperate maritime climate, with annual rainfall averaging 800 mm, keeps the region's predominantly glacial till and Mercia Mudstone subgrades in a persistently damp state. A laboratory CBR test becomes essential for any pavement design here because soaked conditions directly reduce subgrade strength. Unlike field CBR, the lab version controls moisture and density precisely, following BS 1377-4:1990, so engineers obtain repeatable values for the stiff clays found across Digbeth, Sparkhill, and the wider city. Before specifying pavement layers, many geotechnical teams in Birmingham first run a classification of soils to confirm whether the material behaves as cohesive or granular, which influences how the CBR result is interpreted for the design traffic load.

Soaked CBR values in Birmingham's glacial tills commonly range between 1.5% and 3%, a critical input for pavement design under wet conditions.
Scope of work in Birmingham
Critical ground factors in Birmingham
Compare the red sandstone-derived soils of Sutton Coldfield with the stiff clays of the city centre: a pavement designed from a single unsoaked CBR from one zone can fail within two winters if used for the other district. In Birmingham, the risk lies in assuming uniform subgrade behaviour across the city's variable drift geology. A laboratory CBR test run on a sample from a site in Kingstanding may show 2.8%, while a sample from a previous project in Yardley Wood, only 5 km away, might yield 1.6% under the same soaking protocol. Ignoring these localised differences leads to either over-designed pavements that waste budget or under-designed ones that crack and rut within months.
Our services
We offer a complete suite of laboratory CBR services for Birmingham's civil engineering and highway projects, from sample preparation to full reporting with UKAS traceability.
Routine Soaked CBR Test
Standard four-day soaked CBR on remoulded or undisturbed samples, compacted to either standard or modified Proctor density. Includes moisture content determination and load-penetration curve.
Unsoaked CBR Test
Rapid unsoaked CBR for preliminary design or low-risk sites where saturation is unlikely. Useful for granular subbases and temporary haul roads in Birmingham's industrial areas.
CBR with Swell Measurement
Simultaneous measurement of swell during the four-day soaking period, critical for expansive clays found in parts of Birmingham such as Moseley and Harborne.
CBR on Site-Specific Gradations
Custom testing on material with the exact particle size distribution of the project borrow source, including correction for oversize particles (20 mm discard) per BS 1377.
Q&A
What is the difference between a laboratory CBR test and a field CBR test?
A laboratory CBR test is performed on a compacted sample under controlled moisture and density conditions, typically soaked for four days, allowing repeatable comparisons between materials. A field CBR test is done in-situ on the natural subgrade, which may have variable moisture and compaction. For design in Birmingham, the lab test is preferred for fill and imported materials, while field CBR is used for existing subgrades.
How much does a laboratory CBR test cost in Birmingham?
The cost for a standard soaked laboratory CBR test in Birmingham typically ranges between £100 and £190 per sample, depending on whether swell measurement is included and the urgency of turnaround. Volume discounts may apply for multiple samples from the same project.
Which standard governs laboratory CBR testing in the UK?
The primary standard is BS 1377-4:1990, specifically Clause 7 for the California Bearing Ratio test. For unbound mixtures used in pavement layers, BS EN 13286-2:2010 also applies. UKAS-accredited labs follow these standards with strict control on sample preparation, soaking duration, and penetration rate.
Why is soaked CBR important for Birmingham's road projects?
Birmingham experiences significant winter rainfall, and its glacial till subgrades lose strength when wet. A soaked CBR test simulates the worst-case moisture condition after prolonged rain, giving a conservative design value. Without it, pavements designed on dry CBR alone may suffer premature rutting and cracking in the city's wetter months.