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Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR)

Ground Radar (also known as Ground Penetrating Radar, GPR, Impulse Radar Ground Probing Radar, Sub-surface Radar and Surface Penetrating Radar) was originally developed for mapping geological features. It is now increasingly used in engineering and offers a unique non-invasive and non-destructive means for the characterisation of the subsurface and subsurface features.

Ground Radar can be used on a wide variety of materials, most commonly soil, concrete and asphalt.

The following is a brief list of the more common uses of Ground Radar:

  • Construction Detail - Ground Radar is can determine the general arrangement of construction, changes in material type, location of structural steelwork and layer thickness.
  • Concrete Mapping - Ground Radar can be used to inspect concrete floors, walls, decks, slabs, tunnels, balconies, warehouses and garages. It can locate rebar, tendons, conduits, voids and measure slab thickness.
  • Chimney Flue Location - Ground Radar provides a quick and non-intrusive method of locating and mapping chimney flues. The results can either be marked on site or onto CAD drawings.
  • Roads, Runways and Pavement Surveys - Ground Penetrating Radar can determine pavement thickness (asphalt and concrete), detect voids underneath the road pavement, identify de-bonding between layers and determine layer thickness.
  • Buried Objects - GPR can be used to locate underground storage tanks (UST), grave location, forensic investigations and a wide variety of other buried objects.
  • Service Location - Ground Radar is the only non-destructive technology that can identify non-metallic as well as metallic subsurface utilities. It is suitable for the location of services including water, sewer, gas, electric, telephone and fibre optic.
  • Hazardous Waste - Having successfully located buried pipes, drums and underground storage tanks, Ground Radar can, under the right conditions, be used to identify the extent of any leakage and contamination.
  • Foundations - Ground Radar is a useful tool for the location, investigation and determination of the extent of footings and foundations.
For further information contact: Rom Gostomski, Associate
Direct Tel: 020 7565 7054
Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
 

Ground Penetrating Radar survey

Ground Penetrating Radar survey. Inset top: GPR radargram; Inset middle: SIR3000 GPR control unit; Inset bottom: GPR wall survey