A micropile is a small-diameter (5 to 12 inches) drilled and grouted deep foundation element that transfers structural loads through weak soils to competent bearing strata or rock. Engineers specify micropiles for foundation underpinning, seismic retrofit, slope stabilization, and new construction on poor soils, with typical load capacities from 50 to over 500 kips per pile at installed depths from 20 to 150 feet.
Budinger & Associates is a micropile contractor headquartered in Spokane Valley, Washington with a second office in Hayden, Idaho. Founded in 1976, we design and install micropiles across Washington, Idaho, Oregon, and Montana under a single design-build contract that covers subsurface exploration, structural design, installation, and load testing.
Engineers and contractors face foundation challenges that conventional driven or augered piles cannot solve. Limited overhead clearance, vibration-sensitive neighbors, weak surface soils, and seismic retrofit loads all rule out standard piling. Micropiles work in those conditions. The drilling process generates low vibration, the rigs fit through standard doorways, and the grouted bond zone develops capacity in materials too weak for direct bearing. Our team includes licensed geotechnical engineers, certified field technicians, and in-house drilling crews affiliated with the ADSC International Association of Foundation Drilling, so the firm that maps your soil also stamps your foundation drawings and operates the rig on installation day. See related work on our geotechnical construction services page.
