GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERING
CELBRIDGE
HomeIn-Situ TestingField permeability test (Lefranc/Lugeon)

Field Permeability Testing (Lefranc & Lugeon) in Celbridge

Practical geotechnics, field-tested.

LEARN MORE

IS EN ISO 22282-2 and IS EN ISO 22282-3 define the framework for water permeability tests in geotechnical investigation, and in Celbridge these standards are not optional, they are essential. The town sits on the northern edge of the Carboniferous limestone plain where glacial till deposits overlay a karstified bedrock aquifer. This geological sequence, shaped by the Liffey valley and post-glacial drainage, means that excavation design or dewatering without a field-measured hydraulic conductivity value is a gamble. We run Lefranc tests in soil horizons and Lugeon tests in fractured rock because the interface between till and limestone here controls groundwater flow. A simple lab permeameter test on a disturbed sample will miss the secondary permeability that dominates the real behaviour of this ground.

A single Lugeon value of 3 Lu at 15 m depth can mean the difference between sump pumping and a full wellpoint dewatering system.

Our service areas

How we work

Celbridge’s population has grown by over 40% in fifteen years, driving new residential schemes on marginal land near the Rye River and the Castletown estate, where the water table sits less than two metres below ground level. In these conditions, a Lugeon test run at five pressure stages in a diamond-drilled NQ borehole gives us the hydraulic fracture pressure and the laminar flow regime of the rock mass. We often combine this with CPT testing to map the soft alluvial lenses that appear between the topsoil and the boulder clay, and with test pits to log the cobble content that affects infiltration rate. The resulting field permeability coefficient, expressed in m/s, feeds directly into the groundwater control plan required by the local authority before any basement excavation deeper than three metres can proceed.
Field Permeability Testing (Lefranc & Lugeon) in Celbridge
Technical reference — Celbridge

Site-specific factors

In Celbridge we have seen more than one case where a site investigation relied solely on SPT blow counts and lab permeability, and the contractor hit a solution channel in the limestone at eight metres. The inflow overwhelmed the sump pumps within hours. A Lugeon profile would have picked up that open discontinuity because the test injects water under controlled pressure and records the pressure-flow relationship. When the flow increases disproportionately with pressure, you know you are dealing with fracture dilation or infill washing out. Ignoring this means risking basal heave in the excavation, loss of ground, and in the worst scenario, a collapse that endangers the crew. The Health and Safety Authority takes a dim view of groundwater incidents that could have been foreseen with a simple in-situ test.

Need a geotechnical assessment?

Reply within 24h.

Email: contact@geotechnical-engineering.co

Explanatory video

Regulatory framework

IS EN ISO 22282-2:2012, IS EN ISO 22282-3:2012, Eurocode 7 (EN 1997-2:2007), BS 5930:2015+A1:2020

Reference parameters

ParameterTypical value
Test standardIS EN ISO 22282-2 (soil), IS EN ISO 22282-3 (rock)
Borehole diameter for LugeonNQ (75.7 mm) or HQ (96 mm)
Lefranc test section0.5–1.0 m isolated with packer or casing
Lugeon pressure stages5 stages, typically 1-3-5-3-1 bar
Test zone length in rock3.0–5.0 m, sealed with pneumatic packer
Reporting parameterk (m/s) for Lefranc, Lugeon units (Lu) for rock
Typical Celbridge till k range1×10⁻⁷ to 5×10⁻⁵ m/s

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between a Lefranc test and a Lugeon test?

A Lefranc test measures hydraulic conductivity in soil by injecting or extracting water from an isolated section of a borehole and recording the pressure or flow response. A Lugeon test is the rock mechanics equivalent: it injects water under pressure into a sealed section of a rock borehole and measures the water take in litres per minute per metre of test section at each pressure stage. The Lugeon value (1 Lu ≈ 1 l/min/m at 10 bar) characterises fracture permeability. In Celbridge we use Lefranc in the till and Lugeon once we hit the limestone.

How much does a field permeability test cost in Celbridge?

The cost ranges from €580 to €1050 depending on the number of test intervals, the depth, and whether the borehole is already drilled. A single Lefranc test in a pre-existing borehole falls at the lower end. A full five-stage Lugeon test with packer setup, pressure control, and real-time data acquisition in a deep rock borehole reaches the upper end. We provide a fixed-price quote after reviewing the borehole log and the target depth.

Why is field permeability testing required for basement construction in Celbridge?

Kildare County Council's planning department requires a groundwater control plan for any excavation deeper than three metres. That plan must be based on a site-specific hydraulic conductivity value measured in the field, not estimated from grain size charts. The shallow water table near the Rye River and the risk of encountering solution features in the limestone make field permeability data essential for designing a safe and compliant dewatering system.

How long does a Lugeon test take on site?

A single five-stage Lugeon test in a 3-metre isolated section typically takes 45 to 60 minutes, including packer inflation, pressure stabilisation at each stage, and data recording. We run the test immediately after drilling the rock section so the fracture walls are clean. The pressure-flow data is reduced on-site and we can give you the Lugeon values and the interpreted flow regime before the rig demobilises.

Location and service area

We serve projects across Celbridge and surrounding areas. More info.

View larger map