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 Port Byron, Cayuga 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 Port Byron, 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.
Port Byron occupies the Owasco Outlet / Seneca River corridor in northeastern Cayuga County, on terrain shaped by the Erie Canal and the surrounding drumlin field. Soils across the village and adjacent parcels are a mix of Honeoye silt loam and Lima silt loam on the drumlin flanks, Palmyra gravelly loam on the outwash benches, and Canandaigua silty clay loam and Lyons silt loam in the low canal-side flats.
The Erie Canal, the Seneca River, and the Owasco Outlet all converge near the village, creating a complex hydrologic picture with multiple base-level controls. Commercial site work in Port Byron regularly involves structural fill on the clay-loam and silt-loam flats, cobbly trenching on the drumlin flanks, and dewatering on canal-adjacent and river-adjacent parcels. NYS Canal Corp review applies inside the canal prism. Stormwater permitting ties into the Seneca / Oswego River watershed. Shallow bedrock can appear on the higher drumlin summits but is rarely a design constraint on commercial buildable land.