The Pierre Shale and expansive claystone formations that underlie much of Colorado Springs create a subgrade environment where standard pavement sections rarely survive beyond their first few freeze-thaw seasons. With average winter lows dipping to 17°F and summer highs reaching 85°F, the 100-degree temperature swing demands a flexible pavement design that accommodates both frost heave and the swelling pressures generated when moisture infiltrates the clay-rich foundation soils. Our laboratory team begins every project with a comprehensive subgrade characterization program, extracting Shelby tube samples and performing resilient modulus testing that feeds directly into the AASHTO 1993 structural design equations. For projects along the Powers Boulevard corridor or in the Briargate area, we typically combine the CBR testing data with site-specific traffic load spectra to optimize the asphalt concrete and aggregate base thicknesses. This integrated approach prevents the alligator cracking that plagues under-designed pavements throughout El Paso County, where the combination of montmorillonite clays and inadequate drainage layers has led to premature failures on secondary arterial roads.
A properly designed flexible pavement on expansive Colorado Springs subgrade must distribute wheel loads so that the vertical strain on top of the subgrade never exceeds the threshold that initiates plastic deformation.
Technical details of the service in Colorado Springs

Risks and considerations in Colorado Springs
One of the most frequent and costly mistakes we see in Colorado Springs is the omission of a capillary break layer beneath the aggregate base course when the pavement is constructed on silty clay subgrades with a plasticity index above 25. Without this drainage layer, water that infiltrates through pavement cracks accumulates at the subgrade interface, reducing the resilient modulus by as much as 60% during the spring thaw period and leading to rutting depths that exceed the 0.5-inch terminal serviceability threshold within three to five years. The cost of milling and replacing the failed asphalt plus reconstructing the base is typically four to five times the incremental expense of incorporating a properly graded drainage blanket and edge drains during initial construction. A second common failure mode involves underestimating the truck traffic growth rate along arterial roads serving new subdivisions. When the flexible pavement design uses a 2% annual growth factor but actual traffic increases at 5% due to accelerated development, the pavement reaches its terminal serviceability a full decade before the intended design life expires, triggering unplanned rehabilitation expenditures that strain municipal maintenance budgets.
Our services
Our Colorado Springs laboratory delivers a complete flexible pavement design package that integrates subgrade investigation, material characterization, and structural analysis.
Subgrade Resilient Modulus Testing
Repeated load triaxial testing per AASHTO T 307 on undisturbed Shelby tube samples from the proposed alignment, providing the seasonal Mr values required for layered elastic analysis of the pavement structure.
Traffic Load Spectra Analysis
Conversion of project-specific truck traffic data into equivalent single axle loads (ESALs) using CDOT weigh-in-motion station data from the I-25 corridor to calibrate the design traffic for the 20-year performance period.
Pavement Section Optimization
Iterative structural number calculations balancing asphalt concrete thickness, aggregate base depth, and subgrade stabilization treatments to minimize life-cycle cost while meeting the CDOT terminal serviceability index requirement of 2.5.
Frequently asked questions
What is the typical cost range for a flexible pavement design package in Colorado Springs?
How does the expansive clay subgrade in Colorado Springs affect pavement performance?
The montmorillonite-rich Pierre Shale and related claystone formations can swell by 3% to 8% when moisture content increases, generating uplift pressures that crack the asphalt layer. Our designs mitigate this through moisture-conditioned subgrade preparation, geotextile separation fabrics, and sometimes chemical stabilization with lime or cement to reduce the plasticity index below 15 before placing the aggregate base.
What traffic loading assumptions do you use for Colorado Springs arterial roads?
We derive the 20-year ESAL projection from the project traffic study, cross-referencing the truck percentage and growth rate with CDOT's regional traffic monitoring data from the Pikes Peak Area Council of Governments. For a typical minor arterial, this yields between 1 and 5 million ESALs, while major arterials like Academy Boulevard can exceed 15 million ESALs over the design life, requiring a structural number above 5.0 and a full-depth asphalt or thick aggregate base section.