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 Geneva, Seneca 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 Geneva. We will assess the structure, discuss salvage options, and give you a clear price for complete demo and removal.
Geneva sits at the north end of Seneca Lake on the border between Ontario and Seneca counties, on terrain dominated by the Finger Lakes drumlin field. Soils along the city's commercial corridors are predominantly Honeoye silt loam and Lima silt loam on the drumlin flanks, with Ovid silt loam on the lower slopes and Canandaigua silty clay loam on the lakebed flats close to the Seneca Lake shoreline.
Drainage flows into Seneca Lake directly — one of the deepest lakes in the country — which means any earthwork near the shore falls under tighter watershed protection standards tied to the Seneca Lake watershed. Commercial site work in Geneva regularly deals with cobbly, stony till on the drumlin crests, perched water on the lower silt loam slopes, and trenching constraints in the fine-textured lakefront soils. The downtown grid sits on a mix of historic fill and native till, so subsurface characterization is routine on redevelopment parcels. Shallow bedrock shows up occasionally on the higher drumlin summits.