Chatham-Kent grew rapidly after the railway arrived in the 1870s, transforming farmland into commercial districts and residential blocks built on glacial till and lacustrine deposits. Those clay-rich layers, combined with a high water table near the Thames River, create specific demands for below-grade retention. We approach each anchor design by first correlating soil stratigraphy with load requirements. A proper tieback or deadman anchor relies on accurate shear strength parameters and groundwater conditions. Before calculating active or passive capacity, we often run a plate load test to confirm modulus of subgrade reaction in the anchor bond zone. That field data directly feeds our design models and reduces uncertainty in the final anchor layout.

Anchor capacity in Chatham-Kent is controlled by glacial till stiffness and water table fluctuations — get those parameters wrong and the design fails.