South Florida's subtropical humidity and coastal geology create a unique challenge for seismic site classification. In Fort Lauderdale, the near-surface stratigraphy often alternates between loose quartz sand, organic silt, and the highly porous Miami Limestone formation. These layers can mask a dangerous velocity contrast that only a surface-wave method like MASW can resolve. The Multichannel Analysis of Surface Waves delivers a continuous VS30 shear wave velocity profile without the refusal problems that plague SPT drilling in coral rock. Our team runs the survey on vacant lots, parking areas, and even narrow beachfront parcels along A1A, then processes the dispersion curve on-site to flag any soft-stiff impedance boundaries before the drill rigs mobilize. For projects requiring deep foundations near the Intracoastal Waterway, we often pair the MASW line with a few CPT soundings to tie the shear wave velocity to tip resistance and sleeve friction, giving the structural engineer a complete picture of the subsurface stiffness down to the design bedrock elevation.
A 10 percent error in VS30 can shift a Fort Lauderdale site from Class D to Class E, triggering a 40 percent jump in the seismic design category under ASCE 7-22.
