Laboratory Permeability Testing for Leeds Sites

Leeds sees around 660 mm of rainfall annually, which keeps the ground consistently damp across much of the city's urban footprint. That persistent moisture makes understanding how water actually moves through the soil a critical step before any excavation or foundation work. When we run a laboratory permeability test on samples from a Leeds site, we are measuring exactly that: the rate at which water can travel through the soil matrix under controlled conditions. The falling head method is our go-to for the silty clays and glacial tills that dominate the Aire Valley floor, while constant head tests suit the coarser sands found around the higher ground to the north. We combine this data with a study of soil mechanics to give a complete picture of subsurface drainage.

Illustrative image of Laboratory permeability test (falling/constant head) in Leeds
A permeability coefficient that is off by one order of magnitude can double your drainage infrastructure costs or lead to unexpected groundwater ingress during excavation.

Scope of work in Leeds

Our procedures follow BS 1377-6:1990, the British standard that governs laboratory permeability testing for geotechnical purposes. In Leeds, where the glacial till often contains lenses of sand and gravel, we pay close attention to sample preparation — trimming a specimen from a thin-walled tube without disturbing the natural fabric is essential for a representative result. The test itself involves saturating the sample, applying a known hydraulic gradient, and recording the flow over time. We typically run falling head tests on material with coefficients below 10⁻⁴ m/s, which covers most of the stiff clays around Headingley and the softer alluvium along the River Aire. For projects that need real-time subsurface drainage rates, we also coordinate with field permeability testing to compare lab values against in-situ behaviour.
Laboratory Permeability Testing for Leeds Sites
ParameterTypical value
Test methodFalling head / Constant head (BS 1377-6)
Sample diameter38 mm to 100 mm (thin-walled tube)
Hydraulic gradient applied2 to 30 depending on soil type
Saturation checkB-parameter ≥ 0.95 before test starts
Permeability range (falling head)10⁻⁵ to 10⁻⁹ m/s
Permeability range (constant head)10⁻² to 10⁻⁵ m/s

Critical ground factors in Leeds

The permeameter cell sits on a bench in our Leeds laboratory, a simple acrylic cylinder with porous discs top and bottom, but the data it produces carries significant weight. A permeability coefficient that is off by one order of magnitude can double your drainage infrastructure costs or lead to unexpected groundwater ingress during excavation. For a basement project in the city centre, where the water table sits just a few metres below ground, relying on published values instead of a site-specific test introduces real financial and safety risk. We see this most often when developers assume uniform conditions across a site that actually contains variable till with sand partings.

This service complements our laboratory testing work for a complete project analysis.

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Email: contact@geotechnical-engineering.biz
Applicable standards: BS 1377-6:1990 (Methods of test for soils — Consolidation and permeability tests), BS 5930:2015 (Code of practice for ground investigations), Eurocode 7 (EN 1997-2:2007) — Ground investigation and testing

Our services


We offer two standard configurations of the laboratory permeability test, each tailored to the typical soil profiles found across Leeds and West Yorkshire.

Falling head permeability test

Designed for fine-grained soils — the clays and silty tills that underlie most of central Leeds. The test measures the time for water to fall between two fixed head levels in a standpipe, giving a reliable k-value for materials where flow is slow.

Constant head permeability test

Used for granular soils like the sands and gravels found in the Aire Valley terraces. Water flows through the sample under a constant head difference, and the steady-state flow rate is measured directly. This method suits material above 10⁻⁵ m/s.

FAQ

How much does a laboratory permeability test cost in Leeds?

A standard falling head or constant head test ranges between £370 and £560 per sample, depending on the soil type and the number of test stages required. Bulk discounts apply for projects with more than six samples.

What is the difference between falling head and constant head tests?

Falling head tests are used for low-permeability soils such as clays and silts, where the water level drops slowly in a standpipe over time. Constant head tests are reserved for sands and gravels, where a steady flow is maintained through the sample and the discharge volume is measured directly. The choice depends entirely on the soil's expected permeability range.

How long does it take to get results from a permeability test?

For a routine falling head test on a Leeds clay, results are typically available within 5 to 7 working days from sample receipt. Constant head tests on sands can be faster — around 3 to 4 days — because the flow reaches steady state more quickly. Urgent turnaround is possible with prior arrangement.

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