The soil profile changes dramatically between downtown Montreal and the eastern boroughs. In Ville-Marie, you might hit compact glacial till within three meters, while over in Hochelaga-Maisonneuve or the eastern Plateau, the Champlain Sea clay extends 20 to 30 meters deep with sensitivity ratings that make any geotechnical engineer pause. A conventional fixed-base structure sitting on that sensitive clay amplifies seismic waves straight into the frame. Base isolation seismic design flips the problem on its head. Instead of forcing the building to fight the shaking, we decouple it from the ground motion entirely. The isolators absorb the displacement while the superstructure stays level. For a city like Montreal, where the seismic microzonation maps show distinct response spectra in less than two kilometers, this approach makes structural and financial sense. We have seen projects on Sherbrooke Street where isolating the base reduced the design base shear by over 60 percent compared with a fixed-base scheme under the same NBCC 2020 site class.
In Montreal's Champlain clay basin, base isolation can cut the design base shear by more than half while keeping the superstructure elastic under the 2% in 50-year event.
Service characteristics in Montreal

Critical ground factors in Montreal
We set up the testing rig with a 10,000 kN vertical actuator and a ±500 mm horizontal stroke. The machine runs on a servo-hydraulic loop that can replicate the velocity pulses recorded in the Charlevoix seismic zone, the source that dominates Montreal's hazard deaggregation. A lead-rubber bearing that looks perfect on the specification sheet can lose 20 percent of its energy dissipation capacity after just three cycles at MCE displacement if the lead core overheats, something you only catch in a full-scale dynamic test. The Champlain clay adds another layer: consolidation settlement under the isolator pedestals can tilt the bearings and reduce their lateral capacity. We model that coupled behavior with the deep excavation and foundation data before finalizing the isolation parameters. Skipping that step in Montreal means you are betting the building's seismic performance on an assumption, not a verified condition.
Our services
We provide two core service packages for base isolation in Montreal, both grounded in the laboratory characterization of the actual devices and the site-specific geotechnical conditions.
Nonlinear Time-History Analysis & Isolator Specification
We develop the full NLTHA model in ETABS or Perform-3D using ground motion suites matched to the NBCC 2020 uniform hazard spectrum for Montreal. The output includes the isolator force-displacement backbone, the stability check under MCE loading, and the specification sheet for procurement.
Full-Scale Isolator Testing & Quality Control
At our ISO/IEC 17025 accredited laboratory, we run the prototype and production tests required by ASCE 7-22 Section 17.8: cyclic shear, aging, creep, and ultimate displacement capacity. Each bearing gets its own digital certificate before it ships to the Montreal site.
Frequently asked questions
Does base isolation work on the soft Champlain clay common in Montreal?
Yes, and it is often the best solution. The soft clay amplifies long-period motion, which is exactly what a fixed-base mid-rise building wants to avoid. Base isolation shifts the structure's period past the amplification range. We verify the soil-isolator interaction with site-specific CPT and shear wave velocity profiles to confirm the effective damping and displacement demand.
What is the typical cost range for base isolation design and testing on a Montreal project?
For a medium-scale building, the combined design, analysis, and laboratory testing package typically falls between CA$6,150 and CA$11,870, depending on the number of isolator types and the complexity of the ground motion suite.
How does the NBCC 2020 treat base-isolated structures compared with conventional ones?
The NBCC 2020 references ASCE 7-style provisions for isolated structures, allowing a lower response modification factor R when the isolation system is properly tested and the superstructure remains essentially elastic. The key is demonstrating, through prototype testing, that the isolator meets the minimum lateral restoring force and stability requirements under MCE displacement.