Upper Hutt sits at an elevation of roughly 65 metres above sea level, straddling the Hutt River's active floodplain. The city's 44,000 residents rely on a road network that crosses alluvial gravels, silts, and occasional peat lenses—conditions that punish poorly designed pavements. Rigid pavement design here demands more than a standard concrete slab. It requires a thorough understanding of subgrade variability between the quartz-rich gravels near the river and the weathered greywacke slopes toward the Akatarawa foothills. Our team approaches each rigid pavement design project by first characterising the foundation soils through targeted geotechnical investigation, then modelling slab response under the heavy traffic loads common along SH2 and the industrial estates of Whakatiki Street. A well-executed rigid pavement design locks in long-term performance, reducing joint spalling and pumping failures that plague shortcuts.
Upper Hutt's alluvial gravels can deliver CBRs above 40%, but the same site often hides soft lenses that demand targeted rigid pavement reinforcement.
Methodology applied in Upper Hutt

Critical ground factors in Upper Hutt
Trentham and Totara Park sit on deep alluvial gravels that drain freely, offering relatively predictable rigid pavement design conditions. Drive ten minutes north to Timberlea or Brown Owl, and the profile shifts dramatically: thinner gravel caps over silty clay, perched water tables, and frost-susceptible fines near the surface. The biggest risk in Upper Hutt isn't just cracking—it's pumping erosion at transverse joints when water becomes trapped between the slab and a low-permeability subgrade. We see this repeatedly in poorly drained industrial yards. Our rigid pavement design protocol includes targeted subdrainage assessment and, where needed, a permeable drainage layer beneath the slab to intercept groundwater before it can transport fines. Ignoring these micro-local differences between Upper Hutt suburbs turns a 30-year design life into a maintenance headache within five.
Our services
Our rigid pavement design process in Upper Hutt moves from subsurface investigation through to joint detailing and construction support. Every project draws on local knowledge of the Hutt River floodplain and Terrace gravel formations.
Subgrade evaluation for rigid pavements
We map soil variability across the site using dynamic cone penetrometer testing, test pits, and laboratory CBR determination to establish the modulus of subgrade reaction for NZS 3404 design inputs.
Concrete slab thickness design
Fatigue-based design accounting for traffic load spectra, axle configurations, and Upper Hutt's specific climate factors. We model edge stresses and curling behaviour for both doweled and undoweled joints.
Joint layout and detailing
Optimised joint spacing, load transfer dowel specification, and tie bar design to control cracking. Details adapted to the thermal expansion range typical of the Wellington region.
Construction support and QA
On-site verification of subgrade preparation, concrete flexural strength testing, and joint installation inspection to ensure the as-built pavement matches the design intent.
Frequently asked questions
What is the typical cost range for rigid pavement design for a commercial project in Upper Hutt?
For a standard commercial or industrial pavement in Upper Hutt, rigid pavement design fees typically range from NZ$3,410 to NZ$9,640 depending on area, traffic loading complexity, and the extent of geotechnical investigation required. Smaller projects like service station forecourts fall toward the lower end, while heavy-duty container yards needing detailed subgrade improvement design sit at the upper end.
How does rigid pavement design differ from flexible pavement design for Upper Hutt conditions?
Rigid pavement design relies on the concrete slab's flexural stiffness to distribute loads over a wider subgrade area, making it less sensitive to subgrade CBR variations than flexible pavements. In Upper Hutt's mixed alluvial soils this is an advantage, but the trade-off is greater sensitivity to joint performance and thermal curling. Flexible pavements tolerate minor differential settlement better, while rigid pavements demand stricter subgrade uniformity.
What is the minimum subgrade CBR needed before considering soil improvement under a rigid pavement in Upper Hutt?
We recommend a minimum design CBR of 6% for rigid pavements in Upper Hutt, though values above 10% are preferable. Many Trentham and Heretaunga sites achieve this naturally on the gravel terraces. Where CBR drops below 5%—common in the siltier deposits near the Hutt River's former flood channels—we specify lime stabilisation or a compacted granular overlay before placing the concrete slab. More info.