CC
Central Coast Nsw
Central Coast NSW, Australia

MASW & VS30 Shear Wave Velocity Surveys on the Central Coast NSW

The Central Coast corridor has transformed from quiet holiday shacks to a dense commuter belt with major infrastructure pushing into terrain that would have been bypassed a generation ago. The Gosford Formation’s interbedded sandstones and shales, overlain by highly variable Quaternary alluvium across the floodplains around Tuggerah Lake, create abrupt lateral changes in stiffness that catch out generic site classifications. Without a measured shear wave velocity profile, assumptions about Site Class can be off by an entire category—and that flows straight to the structural budget. We run MASW surveys across residential subdivisions in Wadalba through to commercial developments in Erina, delivering Vs30 values that slot directly into AS 1170.4 hazard spectra. For deeper stratigraphic control we often couple the survey with seismic refraction to resolve bedrock depth where the MASW fundamental mode loses resolution in the top 30 metres.

A site class jump from C to D under AS 1170.4 can double the seismic base shear—measuring Vs30 rather than guessing it is the cheapest insurance a project can buy.

Technical details of the service in Central Coast NSW

On the Central Coast we regularly see sites where the borelog says 'stiff clay' down to 6 metres but the dispersion curve tells a different story—low-velocity lenses from paleochannel infill that a dynamic cone would never pick up. That mismatch is exactly why AS 1170.4 Supplement 1 pushes for direct Vs measurement rather than relying on blow counts alone. Our field setup uses a 24-channel seismograph with 4.5 Hz geophones at 2-metre spacing, activated by a 10 kg sledgehammer on an aluminium striker plate; the active-source MASW array resolves the upper 20 to 30 metres cleanly on most Central Coast sites. In Gosford’s steeper terrain where access limits the array length, we supplement with passive-source microtremor recording to stabilise the low-frequency end of the curve. The output feeds a 1D Vs column that geotechnical engineers use directly for site classification, or as a constraint for liquefaction triggering analyses when the water table is within 5 metres of grade—common across the Wyong River and Ourimbah Creek corridors. When foundation options are still open, the same Vs30 value informs whether a stiffened raft or a piled solution makes economic sense under the seismic provisions of AS 2159.
MASW & VS30 Shear Wave Velocity Surveys on the Central Coast NSW
MASW & VS30 Shear Wave Velocity Surveys on the Central Coast NSW
ParameterTypical value
Array length (active)46–69 m (24 ch @ 2–3 m spacing)
Source10 kg sledgehammer, aluminium plate
Depth of investigation (Vs30)Typically 25–35 m on Central Coast soils
Vs30 reportingPer AS 1170.4 Site Classes A–E
Passive-source optionLinear microtremor array (LMA), 60+ m depth
Data deliverablesDispersion curve, 1D Vs profile, Vs30 value, site class letter

Risks and considerations in Central Coast NSW

With the Central Coast population now exceeding 350,000 and major precincts like the Gosford waterfront and Warnervale Town Centre under active development, the exposure to seismic risk is concentrated in areas where the soil column amplifies ground motion. The 1989 Newcastle earthquake—magnitude 5.6, epicentre just 70 km north—produced Modified Mercalli intensities of VI across the Central Coast and a damage bill exceeding $4 billion in today’s dollars. Much of that damage correlated with soft soil amplification on Quaternary sediments identical to those underlying The Entrance, Long Jetty, and parts of Tuggerah. A site classified as Class C on the basis of SPT N-values alone can easily prove to be Class D or even E once the Vs30 is measured, because blow counts do not capture small-strain stiffness. Under AS 1170.4:2007 the spectral shape factor for Class D is 1.5 times that of Class C, so the structural cost penalty for a misclassification compounds across every column, shear wall, and footing on the project. The same dataset doubles as a screening tool for liquefaction susceptibility, because the Vs-based cyclic resistance ratio method is embedded in the NCEER/Youd-Idriss framework referenced by Australian practice.

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Applicable standards: AS 1170.4:2007 – Structural design actions, Part 4: Earthquake actions in Australia, AS 1726:2017 – Geotechnical site investigations, ASTM D7400-19 – Standard test methods for downhole seismic testing (crosshole method referenced for QA)

Our services

Every MASW survey on the Central Coast is tailored to the site constraints and the end-use of the data—whether it is a single Vs30 figure for a DA submission or a full 1D velocity column for a dynamic soil-structure interaction model. The three packages below cover the range we deliver.

Vs30 Site Classification Package

One or two MASW arrays positioned at the building footprint, processed to a measured Vs30 value with a signed site class letter. Suitable for residential subdivisions, single commercial lots, and council DA conditions in the Central Coast LGA.

Multi-Array Zonation Survey

Five to twelve arrays on a grid across larger industrial or multi-building sites. Delivers a Vs30 contour map and site class zonation plan, allowing the structural engineer to assign different hazard spectra to different blocks.

Combined MASW + Refraction Tomography

Active MASW paired with a seismic refraction line along the same spread. The P-wave tomography resolves bedrock topography and rippability, while the MASW provides the Vs column—useful where cut-to-fill transitions cross the site.

Top questions

What does a MASW survey cost on the Central Coast, and what drives the price?

For a standard Vs30 classification using one or two active MASW arrays on an accessible Central Coast site, budget between AU$2,690 and AU$5,000. The range depends on the number of arrays, site access (slopes or dense bush around Kariong or Somersby can slow the crew), and whether passive-source recording is needed to meet the 30-metre depth requirement in softer ground. A multi-array zonation survey for a larger commercial site typically falls at the upper end or slightly above, reflecting the extra field time and the contouring deliverable.

How long does the field work take, and when do we get the report?

Field acquisition for one or two MASW arrays takes half a day on site. Processing the dispersion curves, inverting for the 1D Vs profile, and preparing the signed report is usually three to four business days. If we are combining MASW with a refraction line on the same spread, add one extra day for the tomographic inversion.

Can you do MASW inside an existing warehouse or on a concrete slab?

MASW needs geophone coupling to natural ground or compacted fill; a concrete slab scatters the surface-wave energy and produces an unusable dispersion curve. On paved sites we either work from the perimeter grassed area and model the subsurface assuming reasonable lateral continuity, or we drill through the slab and run a downhole seismic test—which is a different method but gives you the same Vs profile for site classification purposes.

Coverage in Central Coast NSW