Old barn teardown, structural demolition, debris removal, and full site clearing. We take down barns, outbuildings, and agricultural structures and clean the site completely.
Backwell demolishes old barns, agricultural outbuildings, and farm structures throughout Clay, Onondaga County, and the surrounding area. Old barns represent a significant liability and safety hazard — collapsing roofs, rotted timbers, and failing foundations are a danger to people and livestock. We take them down completely and efficiently, removing all debris and leaving the site clean and ready for its next use.
Our barn demolition process includes structural assessment, selective salvage of usable materials if desired, mechanical demolition, complete debris removal and hauling, and foundation removal or filling as needed. We work on all sizes of agricultural structures from small outbuildings and equipment sheds to large dairy barns and multi-bay structures. Our equipment is right-sized for agricultural properties with limited access.
Contact us for a free estimate on barn demolition in Clay. We will assess the structure, discuss salvage options, and give you a clear price for complete demo and removal.
Clay covers the low-relief lake-plain country in northern Onondaga County, between the Seneca River, the Oneida River, and Oneida Lake. Soils across the town's extensive commercial and warehouse corridor along Route 31 and I-481 are a mix of Minoa fine sandy loam, Lamson very fine sandy loam, and Palmyra gravelly loam on the modest ridges, with Sun and Lyons silt loams in the frequent low swales.
The Three Rivers area — where the Seneca and Oneida join to form the Oswego — controls the regional base-level drainage, and most of Clay's upland parcels sit only a few feet above that elevation. Site work here typically deals with high water tables, flat stormwater gradients, and fine-textured subgrades that require structural fill under any significant slab or pavement load. Trenching usually runs through non-cohesive fine sand or silty loam, so sheet piling and shoring are routine on utility installations. Bedrock is rarely encountered within standard excavation depths. Stormwater permitting ties into the Oswego River watershed, and the town's MS4 program imposes enhanced sediment and phosphorus control on industrial development.