Jersey City’s dense urban fabric and complex glacial geology make seismic site classification a critical first step for any structural design, particularly under the ASCE 7-22 and 2021 IBC provisions that enforce strict VS30 thresholds. The region’s subsurface is a patchwork of varved clays, terminal moraine deposits, and anthropic fill along the Hudson waterfront, conditions where borehole refusal or access restrictions often limit traditional SPT-based methods. A surface-wave survey determines the time-averaged shear wave velocity in the upper 30 meters without disturbing sensitive urban infrastructure. For mid-rise structures near Journal Square, where the transition from soft organic silts to dense glacial till can occur across a single block, the seismic microzonation study often begins with a high-resolution MASW transect. When deeper refusal is expected in the Palisades diabase, we pair the survey with a seismic refraction line to constrain the bedrock interface and ensure the velocity model is not biased by low-velocity zones.
An MASW-derived VS30 of 270 m/s versus 260 m/s can shift a Jersey City site from Site Class E to D, altering the seismic design category and foundation costs by a wide margin.
Service characteristics in Jersey City

Demonstration video
Critical ground factors in Jersey City
A common pitfall we see in Jersey City is the reliance on generic VS30 proxies from regional maps rather than a measured site-specific value. The USGS Global VS30 Map Server can misclassify a site by a full class—particularly along the Gold Coast, where thick compressible clays overlie dense ablation till, yielding an average velocity that a remote estimate cannot capture. Relying on a proxy may assign Site Class C when the true profile is D, or worse, classify a Site E liquefiable fill as competent ground. The IBC explicitly requires a measured VS30 when soil conditions are uncertain or when the structure is in Seismic Design Category D or higher. A surface-wave survey also mitigates the risk of missing a thin, low-velocity layer that controls site amplification but is invisible to standard penetration testing, a scenario documented by Seed & Idriss in classic ground response studies.
Our services
The MASW survey is integrated with supplementary field and lab testing to build a complete geotechnical model for Jersey City’s varied terrain.
MASW / VS30 Determination
Active-source Rayleigh wave survey with 24- or 48-channel acquisition for IBC site classification. Includes dispersion analysis, 1D inversion, and a signed report with the calculated VS30 value.
Combined MASW + Refraction
Dual geophysical survey for sites with shallow rock or complex stratigraphy. The seismic refraction profile constrains the bedrock velocity, improving the inversion’s depth resolution.
Downhole Seismic (Cross-check)
Borehole-based VS measurement at discrete depths using a triaxial geophone. Used to validate the MASW profile at a control point when drilling is feasible.
Liquefaction Screening Integration
VS30 data combined with liquefaction analysis per Boulanger & Idriss (2014) procedures, particularly for waterfront sites with loose sand fill.
Common questions
What is the typical cost of an MASW survey for a standard urban lot in Jersey City?
For a typical single-family or small commercial lot, an active-source MASW survey with VS30 determination ranges from US$1,710 to US$2,970, depending on the array length required, site access constraints, and whether a passive-source recording is needed to reach the full 30-meter depth.
How does MASW compare to Standard Penetration Testing (SPT) for site class determination in Jersey City?
MASW measures a continuous shear wave velocity profile, while SPT provides a blow count (N-value) at discrete intervals. The IBC permits site class determination via VS30, N-values, or undrained shear strength, but VS30 is the preferred metric because it eliminates the need for empirical correlations that introduce scatter. In Jersey City’s variable fill and varved clay deposits, a velocity profile also detects thin, soft layers that SPT might miss due to sample spacing.
Can an MASW survey be performed on a paved site, or inside an existing building footprint?
Yes, active MASW can be conducted on pavement by coupling geophones with gypsum or a thin sand layer. The survey requires a straight line of 46 to 69 meters, so adjacent streets or open lots are typically used. Inside a building footprint, the array can be deployed along a cleared corridor or in a basement excavation, though coupling to the slab must be carefully documented to avoid high-frequency mode contamination.