Technical Background: NAVD 88 vs NGVD 29
NAVD 88 (North American Vertical Datum of 1988 — EPSG:5703) replaced NGVD 29 (EPSG:5702) as the official US vertical reference. The offset ΔH = H_NAVD88 − H_NGVD29 is not constant — it varies spatially and is computed by the NGS VERTCON tool from a dense grid of geodetic benchmarks.
Per NGS documentation, example values range from +0.202 m (+0.663 ft) in Oklahoma to −0.267 m (−0.876 ft) in other regions. This non-uniformity is why a single constant conversion factor is professionally unacceptable for FEMA, USACE, or floodplain engineering work.
FEMA and USACE Compliance Requirements
USACE HQ guidance explicitly requires the use of VERTCON 1.0 for NGVD29→NAVD88 conversion on flood projects, and mandates documentation of the relationship between project benchmarks and both datums. County-level FEMA partners (e.g., Lake County, IL) require the same VERTCON approach for all BFE (Base Flood Elevation) work.
Misapplying a constant offset or ignoring VERTCON can shift BFEs and structural design elevations by 0.2 to 0.5 meters — directly affecting freeboard, levee safety margins, and flood insurance classification.
Engineering and Legal Consequences
- Structures built to the wrong BFE may fail regulatory minimums for 1% annual chance flood protection
- Incorrect vertical datum in elevation certificates forces property owners into excess flood insurance premiums
- FEMA investigations have documented properties wrongly in/out of flood zones due to vertical datum errors — subject to LOMA/LOMR disputes
- Surveyors and engineers face professional negligence exposure when VERTCON compliance is not documented