Hialeah’s growth from a marshy fringe near the Everglades into a dense urban core brought foundation challenges that didn’t exist on the prairie a century ago. Early developers filled low areas with variable material, and today that legacy shows up in the top eight to twelve feet of stratigraphy. A test pit lets us see those layers directly instead of interpreting them from a bore log alone. When a project falls within the Miami Limestone belt and overlies organic silts from old sloughs, the test pits we excavate become the fastest way to confirm fill thickness and groundwater behavior. For sites where shallow rock is expected within five feet, we often pair visual inspection with grain-size analysis of the overburden to flag expansive fines before the structural engineer locks in a foundation type.
Standing inside a test pit tells you more about Hialeah’s fill history in ten minutes than a week of desktop review ever will.
Scope of work in Hialeah

Typical technical challenges in Hialeah
OSHA Subpart P governs every pit deeper than five feet, and in Hialeah the water table often sits within that range during the wet season. Without proper shoring or benching, a collapse can happen in seconds, especially in the loose sandy fill common across the city’s older subdivisions. The Florida Building Code references ASCE 7 for foundation design parameters, and skipping a direct observation step when fill thickness is unknown puts the structural engineer at a disadvantage. We have pulled intact chunks of coralline limestone from pits that the owner assumed were just loose rubble, a finding that changed the allowable bearing pressure by a factor of three. When the pit stays open, we log it, photograph it, and backfill it the same day to keep the site safe and the schedule moving.
Our services
Our Hialeah test pit investigations cover the complete field-to-lab workflow so you receive both visual logs and laboratory data from the same team.
Backhoe-Excavated Test Pits
Mechanical excavation to 14 ft with continuous geologist logging per ASTM D2488. We photograph walls, measure strata thickness, and collect bulk samples.
Infiltration Rate Measurement
Double-ring infiltrometer testing per ASTM D3385 for stormwater exfiltration design, commonly required by Hialeah drainage review.
Bulk Sampling for Laboratory Testing
50-80 lb samples per soil horizon, delivered to our lab for Proctor, Atterberg, grain-size, and direct shear testing under a single chain of custody.
Groundwater Observation and Monitoring
Immediate water level measurement upon reaching pit bottom, plus standpipe installation if longer-term monitoring is needed.
Common questions
How deep can you safely excavate a test pit in Hialeah?
With a standard backhoe we reach 12 to 14 feet in open ground. OSHA requires shoring or benching beyond 5 feet, and in Hialeah the water table often appears between 4 and 8 feet during summer, so we coordinate dewatering if we need to go deeper.
What does a test pit show that a boring misses?
Continuous lateral visibility. You see lenses, fill pockets, roots, construction debris, and the true contact between natural ground and man-placed material. A split-spoon sample captures a 2-inch segment; a pit wall shows the full story across several feet.
How fast can you mobilize a test pit crew in Hialeah?
Typically 48 to 72 hours once the utility locate ticket clears. We coordinate the backhoe, our field geologist, and traffic control if the pit is near a public right-of-way.
Do you handle both the excavation and the laboratory testing?
Yes. Our geologist logs the pit on site, collects bulk samples under chain of custody, and our in-house lab runs Proctor, Atterberg, grain-size, and shear tests so you get one consistent report.
What is the typical cost range for a test pit in Hialeah?
For a single pit logged to ASTM D2488, with infiltration testing and bulk sampling, costs generally run between US$510 and US$820 depending on depth, access, and lab scope.