Nanaimo
Nanaimo, Canada

Flexible Pavement Design for Vancouver Island Conditions

The mobile nuclear density gauge arrives on site in a reinforced case, calibrated that morning against a magnesium reference block. In Nanaimo, flexible pavement design starts with this instrument—not a guess—because the island's glacial till and marine clay subgrades shift moisture content dramatically between November and August. The gauge tracks compaction curve progress in real time, verifying that each lift of select granular sub-base meets the 98% modified Proctor threshold before the next layer goes down. Crews working near Departure Bay know the fog can roll in by 10 a.m., so density readings get logged early. Back at the lab, a gyratory compactor simulates traffic densification on asphalt mixes formulated with local aggregate from the Cassidy quarries, where crushed basalt offers angularity values that resist rutting better than rounded alluvial gravel. The CBR road testing protocol provides the soaked bearing capacity input that anchors every structural number calculation, especially in low-lying areas west of the Island Highway where the water table sits less than 1.2 m below finished grade for much of the winter.

A subgrade that tests at 5% CBR in February can drop below 3% by October—Nanaimo's seasonal moisture swing demands structural reserves that standard catalog designs overlook.

Technical details of the service in Nanaimo

The rain shadow east of Mount Benson creates a different pavement environment than the wetter coastal strip along Hammond Bay Road. One side sees 1,100 mm of annual precipitation; the other barely 800 mm, and that differential shapes subgrade moisture equilibrium. Flexible pavement design in Nanaimo must reconcile these microclimates with a structural section that stays within budget while resisting thermal cracking during the occasional –10 °C cold snap that hits the mid-island in January. The standard approach layers a 150 mm granular base over 300 mm of select sub-base, topped with 100 mm of hot-mix asphalt in two lifts, but those numbers shift when the plate load test reveals modulus of subgrade reaction values below 40 MPa/m—common in the silty clays mapped along the Nanaimo River floodplain. Mix design incorporates PG 58-28 binder, selected for the moderate coastal temperature range, and air voids are held between 3.5% and 4.5% to balance durability against oxidation. The team adjusts the Marshall stability target upward when truck traffic projections exceed 500 equivalent single axle loads per day, referencing the Transportation Association of Canada's pavement design guide for urban collectors serving the Duke Point ferry terminal corridor.
Flexible Pavement Design for Vancouver Island Conditions
Flexible Pavement Design for Vancouver Island Conditions
ParameterTypical value
Design traffic (ESALs, 20-year)0.5 – 30 million
Hot-mix asphalt thickness75 – 200 mm (two lifts)
Granular base course (CSA A23.1)100 – 200 mm, crushed aggregate
Sub-base thickness200 – 500 mm, select granular fill
Binder performance grade (Superpave)PG 58-28 or PG 64-22
Target air voids in HMA3.5 – 4.5%
Modified Proctor compaction (base)≥ 98% maximum dry density
Subgrade CBR threshold for lime stabilization< 3.0% soaked

Risks and considerations in Nanaimo

Nanaimo sits within the Georgia Basin, underlain by Cretaceous sandstone and conglomerate of the Nanaimo Group, but the surface geology across much of the city consists of variable-thickness glacial till overlying soft marine silts deposited during the last deglaciation. This stratigraphy creates a hidden risk for flexible pavements: differential settlement where till transitions to silt over distances of less than 20 m. The City of Nanaimo's own geotechnical database documents CBR values ranging from 2% to over 15% within a single subdivision, which means a uniform pavement section designed for the average will fail prematurely at the weak spots. Groundwater perched above the low-permeability silts saturates the subgrade during the October-to-March wet season, cutting bearing capacity in half just when construction often wraps up. Deep-seated failures—not just surface rutting—appear within three years when the structural number underestimates these seasonal lows. The team mitigates this by specifying underdrains at 1.5 m depth wherever the groundwater table is observed within 1 m of the design subgrade elevation, and by recommending stone columns as a ground improvement alternative when the combined pavement and fill surcharge would otherwise trigger consolidation settlement exceeding 25 mm in the underlying compressible layer.

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Applicable standards: CSA A23.1 – Concrete Materials and Methods of Concrete Construction, ASTM D1557 – Modified Proctor Compaction Test, ASTM D1883 – California Bearing Ratio (CBR) of Laboratory-Compacted Soils, ASTM D6927 – Marshall Stability and Flow of Asphalt Mixtures, Transportation Association of Canada (TAC) Pavement Design Guide

Our services

Flexible pavement design in Nanaimo extends beyond the structural section drawing. The following services build the technical foundation for each project, from subgrade characterization through mix verification.

Subgrade CBR assessment

Soaked and unsoaked CBR testing on Shelby tube samples and in-situ DCP profiles to map bearing capacity variability across the alignment before pavement design begins.

Traffic load forecasting

Equivalent single axle load projections based on municipal traffic data, ferry terminal throughput, and industrial haul routes for the 20-year design life horizon.

Layer coefficient optimization

Structural number sensitivity analysis balancing granular base thickness, asphalt lifts, and sub-base quality to reach the target SN at the lowest material cost.

Mix design verification

Marshall and gyratory compaction curves with PG binder selection, moisture sensitivity testing, and aggregate consensus property checks per CSA and ASTM protocols.

Quick answers

What traffic data is needed for a flexible pavement design in Nanaimo?

The analysis requires average annual daily traffic split by vehicle class, truck percentages, axle load spectra if available, and growth rate projections. For municipal roads in Nanaimo, we typically obtain this from the City's transportation department or the BC Ministry of Transportation for provincial highways. The Duke Point industrial area and ferry terminal corridors demand higher ESAL estimates than residential collector roads.

How does the rainy season affect flexible pavement construction on Vancouver Island?

Construction between October and March faces saturated subgrade conditions that reduce bearing capacity and complicate compaction. We specify waterproofing of the prepared subgrade with a prime coat immediately after proof-rolling, and we adjust the granular base moisture conditioning to account for the high ambient humidity. Extended wet-weather shutdowns are factored into the project schedule.

What does a flexible pavement design study cost in Nanaimo?

A complete flexible pavement design package for a typical commercial or residential roadway in Nanaimo ranges from CA$2.530 to CA$6.740, depending on the length of the alignment, the number of soil investigation points required, and whether traffic forecasting and mix design verification are included in the scope.

Which binder grade performs best in Nanaimo's coastal temperature range?

PG 58-28 is the standard Superpave binder for Nanaimo's climate, covering the expected pavement temperature range from a low of –28 °C to a high of 58 °C. For heavy-duty industrial pavements or steep grades with slow truck traffic, we evaluate PG 64-22 as an alternative to improve rutting resistance during summer heat events.

Coverage in Nanaimo