Stone foundation, hayloft, post-and-beam, or modern pole barn. Serving Homer and Cortland County.
We call back today, not next week.
Click through to see what a Backwell barn demolition job in Homer includes.
From signed contract to mobilization is typically 2-5 weeks depending on permits. Active equipment time on your property runs days to weeks based on scope. We share a clear schedule with the written estimate.
NYS DOL Public Work registered, OSHA 30, NYSDEC SWPPP compliant, EPA Lead-Safe Certified, SAM Federal Contractor (CAGE 16AD7). GL and WC certificates available on request.
Yes. We pull town, county, and state permits as the scope requires. You sign one document, we chase every approval and inspection.
Yes. Free on-site walk and written fixed-price estimate. No obligation. We do not work on hourly or cost-plus for residential work - you get a number you can plan against.
Local crew, local soil, local permit office.
Working in Homer and the rest of Cortland County means handling the local permit office, soil conditions, and infrastructure. We've worked here for years and know the playbook.
Homer, Cortland County, and surrounding Central New York. Free estimates throughout the region. Onondaga, Oswego, Madison, Oneida, Cayuga, Cortland, Wayne, Jefferson counties.
Homer sits in the Tioughnioga River valley just north of Cortland, on a broad outwash-floored valley cut into the Appalachian Plateau. The valley floor carries Howard gravelly loam and Chenango gravelly loam, well-drained, cobble-rich outwash, while the adjacent hillslopes run into Lordstown channery silt loam and Mardin channery silt loam with fragipan restrictions on deeper drainage.
The Tioughnioga River and Factory Brook define drainage on the valley floor, and the underlying Cortland-Homer-Preble sole-source aquifer imposes additional groundwater-protection requirements on commercial earthwork and stormwater design. Site work in Homer regularly involves cobble-heavy trenching in the outwash, aquifer-protective infiltration controls on pavement-heavy projects, and steep-slope and rock-excavation challenges when development climbs out of the valley onto the surrounding plateau. Frost depth on the valley floor is substantial, and utility burial depths typically reflect Cortland County climatic data rather than lake-moderated Syracuse norms. Projects close to the Tioughnioga River fall under NYSDEC stream-protection permitting in addition to Cortland County sole-source aquifer requirements, and structural fill is commonly imported where native outwash is too cobbly for slab support.
Real reply in hours, not days. We will call back today.
Reply in hours, not days.