

Torque logs record the resistance measured as each screw pile is installed. They help connect the field installation to the expected pile capacity and can be useful for builders, engineers, inspectors, homeowners, and future buyers who want a record of what was installed.
For permits, drawings, torque logs, and warranty records, the important question is not only whether a pile can carry load. It is whether the finished foundation can be explained clearly to the homeowner, builder, inspector, engineer, insurer, or future buyer.
For documentation-heavy projects, the goal is to make the foundation easy to review later. Homeowners, builders, inspectors, engineers, insurers, and future buyers may need to understand what was installed, where it was installed, what it supports, and what field records were collected. Good records reduce confusion after the work is covered.
Documentation is not paperwork for its own sake. It is how the pile layout, bracket selection, installation records, and engineering review stay connected after the work is covered. That can matter for permits, inspections, future renovations, resale, and warranty conversations.
Screw Pile Installers typically looks at the structure type, approximate dimensions, beam or wall locations, soil conditions, drainage, frost exposure, equipment access, utility locates, bracket requirements, and whether the municipality or builder needs documentation.
The pile itself is only one part of the foundation. The bracket, beam or wall connection, installation resistance, pile location, drainage around the work area, and future movement risk all affect whether the finished support system performs well.
BC and Alberta create different foundation problems, but both reward careful planning. BC projects often involve rain, slopes, rock, drainage, and tight urban access. Alberta projects often involve frost, clay, snow load, wind exposure, and wider seasonal swings. A good screw pile plan takes those regional differences seriously before the framing layout is locked in.
Permit and documentation requirements vary by municipality and by project type. A small freestanding structure may need less documentation than an attached deck, garage, addition, suite, or foundation repair. Useful records can include a pile layout, bracket details, engineered drawings or letters, torque logs, installation photos, utility locate records, and warranty information.
If a permit or stamped review is needed, it is better to know that before the pile layout is installed. That gives the homeowner, builder, installer, and engineer a chance to agree on the support locations, connection details, and records that should be kept.
The common mistake with documentation is waiting until the inspector, builder, lender, insurer, or buyer asks for records. It is much easier to keep layout drawings, installation notes, torque records, photos, and engineering letters from the start than to recreate the story later.
Another mistake is assuming that a neighbour's project answers the question for your property. Two yards can look similar and still have different soil, frost exposure, drainage, access, loads, or municipal requirements.
Screw piles are versatile, but they are not the answer for every site. Continuous shallow bedrock, unknown underground utilities, severe drainage problems, unstable slopes, inaccessible work areas, or unusual lateral loads may require a different foundation detail or additional engineering. A good assessment should identify those issues early rather than forcing a pile solution where it does not belong.
Useful information includes the property address, photos of the work area, rough dimensions, drawings or sketches, the structure type, access notes, slope or drainage concerns, permit status, and anything known about soil, fill, rock, utilities, or previous foundation movement. Photos should show both close-up details and the wider access route into the yard.
Records help show what was installed, where it was installed, what it supports, and how the installation was checked for the project.
No. Requirements depend on the municipality, structure type, loads, site conditions, and whether the project is attached, elevated, repaired, or permitted.
Keep pile layout notes, photos, bracket details, torque records where provided, permits, engineering letters or drawings, and warranty information.
Send the property address, photos, rough dimensions, drawings or sketches, access notes, permit status, and any known soil, drainage, slope, or foundation issues.
If you are planning a screw pile project involving screw pile torque logs in BC and Alberta, send Screw Pile Installers the property address, photos, rough dimensions, drawings if you have them, and any notes about access, soil, slope, drainage, or permits. Request a quote from Screw Pile Installers for your screw pile project and the team can review the foundation approach before the layout is locked in.
