The hydraulically driven Casagrande cup device, set up in a Cairns field lab, delivers the fundamental Atterberg limits data that every foundation design in the wet tropics needs. The brass cup drops exactly 10 mm onto a hard rubber base at two blows per second while a technician works a groove into the soil paste with a standard cutting tool. Liquid limit, plastic limit, and the derived plasticity index are not just laboratory numbers here — they quantify how Cairns’s deeply weathered metamorphic and alluvial soils will behave when the wet season saturates the ground for weeks on end. Builders across the northern beaches and the city’s expanding southern corridor rely on these values to avoid structural movement that can appear within the first two wet-dry cycles. We run the full procedure under AS 1289.3.1.1 and AS 1289.3.2.1 in an ISO 17025-accredited laboratory, and the resulting report feeds directly into site classification per AS 2870, which governs residential slab and footing design across Queensland.
A plasticity index above 20% in Cairns alluvial clays signals a shrink-swell risk that must be addressed in the footing design before the first concrete pour.
Service characteristics in Cairns

Typical technical challenges in Cairns
The contrast between a beachfront block in Palm Cove built on Pleistocene sand ridges and a subdivision lot in Bentley Park sitting on Barron River floodplain clay could not be starker when it comes to foundation risk. The sandy profile might deliver a plasticity index below 5% and present no shrink-swell concern at all, while the clay site three kilometres inland can produce a PI exceeding 30% — a highly reactive classification under AS 2870 that demands stiffened raft slabs or deep pier-and-beam solutions. Developers who assume consistent soil behaviour across a multi-lot subdivision in the Mount Peter growth corridor learn this lesson the hard way when the first wet season triggers differential movement in standard slab-on-ground construction. The Atterberg limits test quantifies that risk before earthworks begin, giving the structural engineer the site-specific ys value needed to design a footing system that accommodates the predicted ground movement. In the older Cairns North and Parramatta Park suburbs, where timber Queenslander homes sit on adjustable stumps, the same plasticity data helps renovation engineers determine whether a new extension can use a conventional slab or requires a suspended floor system to decouple from the reactive soil.
Our services
Our Cairns laboratory delivers the full suite of Atterberg limits testing alongside complementary services that together form a complete geotechnical characterisation for your project:
Full Atterberg Limits Suite (LL, PL, PI)
Casagrande cup liquid limit and thread-rolling plastic limit on disturbed samples, reported with plasticity index and AS 2870 site classification guidance. Standard 3–4 day turnaround.
Shrink-Swell Index & Soil Reactivity
Combines Atterberg limits with linear shrinkage (AS 1289.3.4.1) and core shrinkage tests to produce the full shrink-swell index required for footing design to AS 2870.
Combined Physical Properties Package
Atterberg limits paired with particle size distribution, moisture content, and organic content determination for a complete fine-grained soil characterisation under AS 1726.
Q&A
How much does Atterberg limits testing cost in Cairns?
A full Atterberg limits suite including liquid limit, plastic limit, and plasticity index report typically ranges from AU$100 to AU$180 per sample, depending on sample condition and whether expedited turnaround is required. Bulk pricing applies for multi-sample projects.
What is the difference between liquid limit and plastic limit?
The liquid limit is the moisture content at which a soil transitions from a plastic state to a liquid state, determined by the Casagrande cup method. The plastic limit is the moisture content at which the soil begins to crumble when rolled into a 3 mm thread. The difference between them — the plasticity index — quantifies the range of moisture content over which the soil behaves plastically. This range directly correlates with shrink-swell potential.
Why are Atterberg limits important for building on Cairns clay soils?
Cairns’s tropical climate produces deeply weathered, often highly plastic clays that expand when wet and shrink when dry. Atterberg limits provide the plasticity index, which feeds directly into the characteristic surface movement (ys) calculation in AS 2870. Without this data, a footing designed for an assumed site class may be undersized, leading to slab cracking and structural distress within the first few seasonal cycles. More info.