The subsurface conditions beneath a Lawrenceville rowhouse renovation differ radically from what you will encounter on a hillside site in Mount Washington. Where one may reveal competent river terrace deposits, the other often uncovers decades of undocumented fill perched over steeply dipping Pittsburgh Red Beds. An exploratory test pit provides the most direct window into these shallow complexities, allowing our geotechnical team to log stratigraphy visually, collect undisturbed block samples, and identify old foundations or buried mine entries that boreholes could easily miss. While a CPT test offers continuous profiling, it cannot replace the tactile confirmation of a properly excavated and shored test pit, especially when evaluating colluvial soils along the city's notoriously steep slopes.
Pittsburgh's colluvial slopes hide a century of undocumented fill and mine workings that only a well-logged test pit can reliably expose before foundation design begins.
Scope of work in Pittsburgh

Local geotechnical conditions in Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh's development history, from its industrial boom through mid-century decline and modern revitalization, has left a complicated geotechnical legacy across the city. Entire neighborhoods were regraded with slag and fly ash fill that now underlies many residential and commercial properties. When an exploratory test pit is omitted from the site investigation scope, the engineer must rely on assumptions about fill thickness and composition that are often dangerously wrong. We have logged pits in the Strip District where foundry sand extended to seven feet, and others in South Side Flats where timber mat foundations from demolished mills still remained in the subsurface. The most serious risk involves unidentified mine subsidence features: a test pit can expose shallow abandoned entries or voids in the Pittsburgh Coal seam that would otherwise manifest only after construction, potentially triggering catastrophic differential settlement. The Allegheny County Health Department also requires careful handling of any encountered contaminated fill, a protocol we integrate into every urban excavation.
Our services
Our test pit investigations are designed to answer the specific questions that Pittsburgh's geology raises. Each pit is treated as a miniature exploration program with clear safety protocols and detailed documentation.
Fill Characterization
Visual classification and thickness mapping of slag, ash, brick, and other anthropogenic fill common in Pittsburgh's historic neighborhoods.
Mine Void Detection
Shallow exploratory excavation to identify abandoned room-and-pillar mine entries intersecting the overburden-bedrock contact.
Slope Deposit Logging
Detailed sidewall logging of colluvium and ancient landslide debris on hillside lots, with orientation noted for kinematic analysis.
Utility Exposure
Careful hand-dug or vacuum-assisted pitting near existing utilities to verify depth and condition before adjacent construction.
Quick answers
How deep can you excavate a test pit on a typical Pittsburgh residential lot?
On most residential sites with adequate access, we can excavate to a depth of 6 to 8 feet using a compact excavator. For deeper investigations up to 12 feet, we employ stepped and shored configurations that comply with OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart P. Hand-dug pits in tight urban settings rarely exceed 5 feet.
What is the cost range for an exploratory test pit in the Pittsburgh area?
A standard test pit investigation in Pittsburgh, including mobilization, excavation, logging, sampling, and backfill, typically falls between US$520 and US$900 per pit. The final cost depends on depth, access constraints, shoring requirements, and whether we need to coordinate with utility marking or contamination protocols.
Do you need a permit to dig a test pit within Pittsburgh city limits?
Yes. A Right-of-Way permit is required if the pit encroaches on the street or sidewalk, and we must call PA One Call at least three business days before any excavation to locate underground utilities. On private property, no city permit is usually needed, but we always confirm with the owner and follow Allegheny County Health Department guidelines if contaminated fill is suspected.
How do you backfill a test pit and restore the surface?
We backfill in compacted lifts using the excavated material unless contaminated, in which case clean imported fill is substituted. Each lift is mechanically compacted to at least 95% of standard Proctor density if the area will support future structures. Surface restoration matches the pre-existing condition: asphalt patch, topsoil and seed, or concrete replacement as specified.