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Municipal Water Mains · Sea-to-Sky

Step Testing & Zone Isolation in Squamish, BC

Close valves in a planned sequence, watch the zone meter, and the leak tells you which segment it lives in. Step testing is the old, unglamorous, devastatingly effective way to shrink a leaky zone to a few hundred metres of main — before acoustic crews finish the job. Delivered in Squamish and across the Sea-to-Sky by the crews that have pinpointed BC water leaks since 1999.

Night ops
Run at minimum demand
Segment-level
Loss isolated per step
L/hr
Quantified per segment

Free phone consult · No pressure · Mon–Sat 8am–6pm PT

Working Squamish: local context

Ground conditions: Outwash sands give excellent penetration; delta-front and estuary parcels run wetter. One of the cleaner GPR environments on the coast. That shapes both where escaping water shows itself and how leak noise carries — survey design here starts from the ground truth.

Community profile: BC's fastest-growing outdoor town — new multifamily on the delta flats, older townsite services, and industrial waterfront conversion. The distribution system under it carries the pipe materials of every era that built it.

How the Squamish program runs

  1. 1

    Test design

    The zone's valves are mapped into a closing sequence that isolates segments progressively, with customer impact assessed — step tests run at night partly so that brief, planned isolations pass unnoticed. Critical users are identified beforehand.

  2. 2

    Night execution

    With the zone meter logging, valves close step by step. Each closure that drops the inflow by more than the expected demand of the isolated segment has just located leakage inside it — quantified in litres per hour, live.

  3. 3

    Segment ranking

    By morning the zone's loss is allocated across segments: this 400-metre run carries the bulk of it, those streets are clean. The search area collapsed from a zone to a block.

  4. 4

    Acoustic finish

    Correlation and ground mic work pinpoint within the guilty segments — fast now, because the hydraulics already said where to listen. Repairs follow, and a closing meter check proves the recovery.

Pair it with the aerial layer in Squamish

For network-scale work, our drone thermal water main survey in Squamish screens whole corridors first, so these ground crews spend their hours confirming ranked zones instead of walking quiet pipe.

Squamish questions, answered

How does a step test actually find leakage?

By process of elimination, measured at the zone meter. The zone's inflow is watched while valves close in sequence, each closure isolating another segment. When a closure drops inflow by more than that segment's plausible night demand, the difference is leakage inside the segment you just isolated. It is beautifully indifferent to pipe material, depth, soil, or how quiet the leak is — if water flows to it, the meter sees it stop.

Why use step testing when acoustics exist?

Because some leaks defeat listening: deep mains, soft trench backfill swallowing noise, PVC attenuating it, or background loss spread across many small weeps no single one of which correlates. Step testing doesn't care — it counts litres. The professional pattern is hydraulic narrowing first where acoustics struggle, acoustic pinpointing inside the guilty segment after. Each method covers the other's blind spot.

Will our customers notice the test?

Designed and run properly, almost never. Isolations are brief, sequenced at minimum-demand hours, and planned around critical users (anyone on home dialysis, care facilities, process customers get specific handling). The test plan includes restoration verification — every valve confirmed reopened, the zone confirmed back to normal supply before the crew leaves. That discipline is non-negotiable.

How do Squamish ground conditions affect water main leak detection?

Squamish ground is predominantly glaciofluvial outwash sands and gravels on the Squamish River delta. Outwash sands give excellent penetration; delta-front and estuary parcels run wetter. One of the cleaner GPR environments on the coast. For leak work that cuts two ways: it shapes whether escaping water surfaces or vanishes, and it influences how leak noise carries to our sensors — both factored into how we run step testing & zone isolation here, and into when we recommend pairing the aerial thermal screen with the ground crews.

What does the local pipe stock look like in Squamish?

BC's fastest-growing outdoor town — new multifamily on the delta flats, older townsite services, and industrial waterfront conversion. The water mains underneath broadly track that growth story — each construction era left its pipe materials behind, from early metallic stock through the postwar asbestos-cement years to modern PVC — and each material gets matched methods in our survey design.

Do you work nights or off-peak hours in Squamish?

Where the data quality requires it, yes — minimum-demand hours give the cleanest acoustic and flow readings, and noise loggers do their listening at 2–4 a.m. by design. Scheduling is coordinated with your operations staff, Mon–Sat, and active breaks get priority response. 604-239-9934.

What does step testing & zone isolation cost in Squamish?

Province-wide pricing — no regional premium for Squamish or anywhere in the Sea-to-Sky. Surveys and programs are quoted by network size and scope; single investigations start in the high hundreds. The free phone consult produces a firm number in about five minutes.

Need step testing & zone isolation in Squamish?

Free phone consult — system, scope, and a firm quote in five minutes. No pressure.

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