Monitoring Equipment Detects Mini Earthquake in Lancashire and the Lake District

Monitoring Equipment Detects Mini Earthquake in Lancashire and the Lake District
OUR ACCREDITATIONS
Constructionline Gold
PAS 128
CDM 2015
CAA Approved
RICS
ISO 9001 (in progress)

SETTLEMENT MONITORING

STRUCTURAL MOVEMENT

VIBRATION RECORDING

context

What Monitoring Is For.

What Monitoring Is For.

Structural and geotechnical monitoring exists for one reason: to detect movement before it becomes a problem. When construction activity takes place near existing structures, live infrastructure or sensitive ground, monitoring is the risk management tool that gives the project team the evidence to proceed with confidence – or the early warning to stop and act before a movement event becomes a structural incident. Site Surveying Services deploys precision monitoring instrumentation on live construction programmes across Lancashire and the North West. Our systems detect movement accurately, provide clear trend data over the programme duration, and report immediately when readings approach trigger thresholds. That is what monitoring is supposed to do. On this programme, the monitoring instrumentation did exactly that – and detected something nobody had planned for.

What Happened.

What Happened.

During an active monitoring campaign on a construction programme in Lancashire, our instrumentation recorded ground movement events that were inconsistent with the vibration profile of the adjacent construction activity. The readings were accurate, the data was timestamped and continuous, and the event signature was distinct from anything the construction programme was generating.

The events were subsequently confirmed as seismic activity – minor earthquakes, recorded across a wide area of Northern England including Lancashire and the Lake District. The instrumentation had detected and recorded ground tremors that the British Geological Survey confirmed were genuine seismic events in the region.

This was a monitoring success – the instrumentation performed exactly as specified, recording every ground movement event with accurate timestamping and clear data. The seismic events appeared in the monitoring records precisely because the equipment is sensitive enough to detect them.

“The monitoring equipment was deployed to detect millimetre-level movement in structures adjacent to a construction programme. It detected something moving several miles underground. The precision is the same. The scale was unexpected.”
project data
LocATION
Lancashire and the Lake District
SECTOR
Environmental & Energy · Construction & Civil Engineering
SERVICES DELIVERED
Structural & Geotechnical Monitoring
Programme type
Long-term monitoring campaign on a live construction programme
Monitoring types
Settlement monitoring · Structural movement · Vibration recording
DELIVERABLE
Time-series movement records, trend graphs, event reports

What This Demonstrates About Monitoring Precision.

What This Demonstrates About Monitoring Precision.

The ability to detect seismic events during a construction monitoring programme is not a standard specification requirement. It is a demonstration of what precision monitoring instrumentation is capable of when it is set up correctly, calibrated to the right sensitivity and maintained throughout the programme duration. Monitoring instrumentation that is sensitive enough to detect a seismic event several miles away is instrumentation that will certainly detect settlement of a millimetre or two in a structure adjacent to a deep excavation. The precision is not context-dependent. The equipment performs to specification regardless of what is causing the ground to move. The seismic events recorded during this monitoring programme were reported to the client at the time of detection, with the data clearly distinguished from construction-related vibration in the monitoring records. The project team had the full picture – what was happening on site and what was happening beneath it.
Settlement monitoring

Repeated precise levelling of fixed monitoring points to detect vertical movement in structures, pavements and ground surfaces. Sub-millimetre vertical accuracy – the standard for detecting settlement adjacent to excavation and piling works.

Structural movement

Total station monitoring of fixed prism targets installed on structures, retaining walls and facades – detecting both horizontal and vertical movement simultaneously for a complete three-dimensional picture of how a structure is moving.

Vibration recording

Automated instrumentation recording ground vibration events – from construction plant, piling operations and, in this case, natural seismic activity – continuously throughout the monitoring programme with timestamped event records.

Trigger level reporting

Alert, Action and Alarm thresholds set by the engineer at the outset. When readings approach or reach threshold, our team reports immediately – not at the next scheduled visit. The purpose of monitoring is early warning. That only works if the warning is immediate.

What Our Data Shows.

What Our Data Shows.

Review of the monitoring data highlights a clear and sudden spike in Peak Particle Velocity (PPV) at 23:23 on 3 December, coinciding precisely with the reported earthquake time.

The clarity of the spike, combined with its timing and short duration, strongly supports the conclusion that the equipment captured the ground motion from the earthquake itself.

This finding aligns with wider reports of the tremor, including coverage by the BBC News, which confirmed the occurrence of a minor earthquake in the Lancashire and Lake District area on the same evening. Residents reported brief shaking and unusual sensations, typical of low-magnitude seismic events in the UK.

The Programme Outcome.

The Programme Outcome.

The construction programme continued throughout the monitoring campaign without incident. All structural movement readings remained within the tolerances specified by the engineer. The seismic events were recorded, reported and understood – they did not represent a risk to the adjacent structures being monitored, and the monitoring data made that clear.

The monitoring campaign delivered exactly what monitoring is designed to deliver: continuous, accurate, documented evidence of what the ground and the adjacent structures were doing throughout the programme. The fact that it also produced a record of seismic events across Northern England is a consequence of the precision of the instrumentation – and a demonstration of what that precision means in practice.

SEISMIC EVENTS RECORDED
Multiple - across Lancashire and the Lake District.
CONSTRUCTION PROGRAMME IMPACT
None - readings within tolerances throughout.
MONITORING CONTINUITY
100% - no data gaps during seismic events.

Why Monitoring Precision Matters for Your Programme

Why Monitoring Precision Matters for Your Programme

Every construction monitoring programme starts with the same question: is there movement? Everything else follows from the answer. If the instrumentation is not precise enough to detect the movement that matters, the monitoring programme is not protecting the project – it is providing a false sense of security.

Site Surveying Services deploys precision monitoring instrumentation – not general-purpose vibration sensors, not consumer-grade equipment, not systems that meet the minimum specification and no more. Our monitoring instrumentation is the same equipment we trust on live programmes adjacent to critical infrastructure, heritage structures and security-sensitive sites. It detects what moves. Including, on this occasion, the earth itself.

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