LT2020 m. prieš Vingrių gatvės rekonstrukciją atlikti žvalgomieji tyrimai bei žvalgymai klojant kabelį. Vingrių šaltinių aplinkoje archeologinius tyrimus 2006 m. vykdė S. Sarcevičius (ATL 2006 metais, 2007, p. 438–441). Teritorijoje tarp Vingrių ir Pylimo gatvių fiksuotas 1,6–3,5 m storio XVII–XX a. kultūrinis sluoksnis, iki 1,5–2,4 m suformuotas XIX–XX a. Aptikta XVIII a. pabaigos – XIX a. pradžios užstatymo liekanų. Prie betoninio vandens rezervuaro tirti tik piltiniai sluoksniai, įžemis nepasiektas. Į V nuo jo fiksuoti tik XX a. sluoksniai. 2007 m. šioje teritorijoje tyrinėjo N. Vailionytė (ATL 2007 metais, 2008, p. 438–439). Fiksuotas suardytas kultūrinis sluoksnis su XVII–XVIII a. radiniais. [...] [p. 535-536].
ENIn 2020, the field evaluation (14 2x2 m test pits totalling 56 m2) and survey (monitoring of 3 utility trenches totalling 106 m2 and dug to a depth of 0.7–1 m) conducted on Vingrių Street in Vilnius recorded a 0.6–4 m thick, 15th–21st-century cultural layer. Test pit 4, which was excavated to a depth of 1.2 m in the W part of the investigated territory, revealed an 18th-century horizon above a late 16th – mid- 17th-century horizon and then a 15th (?) century layer. The rest of the test pits excavated there recorded only 19th–20th-century fill layers contain 16th–20th-century finds. The central part of the investigated territory yielded 2.9–4 m thick, 20th-century fill soil with ground water beginning from a depth of 2.4–3.6 m. Meanwhile to the N of the watery location the 20th-century layer continued to a depth of 1.5–2 m, and below that, 20–40 cm thick, 17th–18th-century horizons had survived. A 20th-century horizon was recorded to a depth of 1.2 m in the square to the E of Vingrių Street, and below that a 50–70 cm thick, 18th-century layer followed by a 1.15 m thick horizon containing 16th – mid-17th-century finds. Only 19th-century horizons containing 17th–19th-century finds and fragments of masonry walls from the same period were recorded in the E part of the investigated territory. The investigation catalogued 427 finds, mostly sherds of 16th–18th-century household pottery and structural ceramics.