British Columbia's Geohazard Landscape and GSI's Engineered Response
No Canadian province concentrates more geohazard risk per kilometer of highway than British Columbia. The convergence of tectonic uplift, glacial valley geometry, extreme precipitation, and wildfire-altered hillsides creates a multi-hazard environment that demands contractors with both technical depth and specialized equipment.
Landslide and Debris Flow Corridors
The Sea-to-Sky Highway (Highway 99), Coquihalla Highway, and Fraser Canyon sections of the Trans-Canada Highway represent BC's highest-consequence landslide corridors. GSI deploys soil nailing, ground anchor systems, and retaining wall solutions engineered for the specific soil and rock conditions along each corridor. For debris flow channels, GSI installs barrier systems designed to catch and redirect flow material while protecting road infrastructure below.
Rockfall Mitigation on BC's Mountain Highways
The Fraser Canyon, Kicking Horse Canyon (Highway 1), and Okanagan bluff corridors face rockfall from fractured metamorphic and igneous formations. GSI's rock bolting systems anchor unstable blocks in place, while attenuator barriers and draped mesh networks provide passive protection where active stabilization alone is insufficient. Our rope access scaling teams remove loose rock from faces that no equipment can reach.
Coastal Erosion Protection
Vancouver Island's coast, the Strait of Georgia shoreline, and the White Rock bluffs experience wave-driven erosion that undermines transportation and utility infrastructure. GSI engineers revetment systems and bioengineering solutions that armor shorelines while meeting BC's stringent environmental and fisheries habitat requirements.
Post-Wildfire Slope Rehabilitation
BC's wildfire seasons leave behind destabilized hillsides that generate debris flows and accelerated erosion during subsequent rain events. GSI provides rapid post-fire slope assessment and installs erosion control, drainage systems, and soil reinforcement that restores hillside stability before the first atmospheric river arrives.
Reach GSI's BC emergency response team at (855) 599-5217 for immediate slope failure assessment and mobilization.