Data center substation pad construction for data center, commercial, and industrial projects in Rome and across Oneida County. (315) 400-2654.
A hyperscale data center pulls hundreds of megawatts from a dedicated substation that has to be built before the building can be energized. Backwell constructs substation pads in Rome for transformer foundations, GIS buildings, switchgear pads, and the access roads and oil-containment basins that surround them.
Substation work in Rome involves heavy structural fill placement to tight tolerances, oil-containment basin excavation with engineered liner systems, and a grounding grid that has to be installed before fill is closed up. We build the access road to handle transformer delivery (typically 200+ ton crawler trailers) and coordinate the construction sequence directly with the utility or EPC contractor.
Backwell self-performs the heavy civil work that data center and industrial builds depend on. We own the fleet, run our own crews, and bid the market. For projects in Rome we coordinate directly with the GC and EPC, work to civil and MEP drawings, and turn the site over with the documentation the owner needs for commissioning and turnover.
Contact us for a scope review or budget number on data center substation pad construction in Rome. Ron responds personally, usually within hours.
Rome sits at the head of the Mohawk Valley on a broad flat plain shaped by glacial outwash and the old Erie Canal corridor. Soils across the city and the surrounding industrial zones are Palmyra gravelly loam on the higher river terraces, with Wayland and Wakeville silt loams in the lower-lying parcels closer to the Mohawk and Wood Creek.
Griffiss Business Park (formerly Griffiss Air Force Base) anchors Rome's industrial development with existing power, fiber, and transportation infrastructure built to military-grade specs. The flat topography and good outwash soils make data center pad construction straightforward, and the existing utilities reduce the time-to-energize compared to greenfield sites.