Commercial, residential, barn, and asbestos demo and demolition with full debris removal. Complete teardown from permits to final cleanup. Serving Syracuse and all of Onondaga County.
Backwell provides professional demo and demolition services in North Syracuse, Onondaga County, and the surrounding area. Backwell provides full-scope demo and demolition services for commercial buildings, residential structures, barns, and industrial facilities throughout Central New York. We manage the entire process from pre-demolition assessments and permits through final debris removal and site grading. For structures containing asbestos, we partner with licensed abatement professionals to handle the hazardous materials, then complete the structural demolition and cleanup.
Based in Constantia, NY, we are local to Onondaga County and know the area, the soil conditions, the regulations, and the contractors. When you hire Backwell for your demo or demolition project in North Syracuse, you get a crew that shows up on time with the right equipment and gets the job done. Contact us today for a free estimate.
North Syracuse occupies the low-relief lake plain north of Syracuse proper, on terrain built from Glacial Lake Iroquois sediments and reworked Seneca River alluvium. Soils across the village and the I-81 / Route 11 commercial corridors are a mix of Lamson and Minoa fine sandy loams and very fine sandy loams on the flats, Palmyra gravelly loam on the modest beach-ridge rises, and Sun and Lyons silt loams in the poorly drained swales between them.
The regional drainage runs through Ley Creek and Bear Trap Creek toward Onondaga Lake, with very flat gradients and extensive historic ditching. Commercial excavation in North Syracuse consistently involves shallow water tables within a few feet of the surface on the fine-textured parcels, structural fill importation where native soils cannot carry pavement loading, and stormwater design that ties into the Onondaga Lake watershed framework. Bedrock is deep and rarely a constraint. Frost-susceptible fines and flat drainage gradients drive pavement, slab, and utility details on most commercial sites.