Commercial drain tile repair contractor serving Port Byron and Cayuga County. Solar farm drainage repair, parking lot French drains, industrial site drains, and municipal stormwater systems.
Backwell is a commercial drain tile repair contractor serving Port Byron, NY and the surrounding Cayuga County area. Drain tile and subsurface drainage systems across Port Byron , on commercial parking lots, industrial sites, solar farms, athletic fields, institutional properties, and municipal stormwater infrastructure , all eventually fail and need repair. When they do, the problem usually shows up as pooling water, a sinkhole, a blown-out outlet, or a section of the site that is suddenly holding water it never held before. Backwell diagnoses the failure, locates the break, excavates, replaces the failed section, and restores the surface. Most commercial drain tile repair projects in Port Byron land in the ,000 to ,000 range, with solar farm drainage repair and large industrial site overhauls running well beyond that.
Backwell handles commercial drain tile repair on sites in Port Byron and throughout Cayuga County, located an Erie Canal village in northwest Cayuga County. Projects we regularly take on include:
The same failure modes show up on commercial drainage systems across Port Byron and the rest of New York. Backwell has repaired all of them:
Every commercial drain tile repair in Port Byron starts with a site walk, typically after a rain event when the failure is most visible. Backwell uses pipe locators and probes to trace existing runs, pushes a camera line through main-line pipe for internal diagnosis, and pulls as-built drawings from the original installation when they are available. That diagnosis produces a written estimate with a real scope, not a guess. Then the crew mobilizes, excavates carefully around adjacent utilities, replaces the failed sections with HDPE corrugated pipe (sock-wrapped where needed), backfills and compacts in lifts, restores the surface, and flow-tests the repaired system before demobilizing.
Commercial drain tile repair pricing in Port Byron depends entirely on the scale of the failure and the surface restoration required. Small sectional repairs run ,500 to ,000. Mid-sized parking lot and industrial site repairs typically run ,000 to ,000. Solar farm drainage overhauls and large industrial site repairs range from ,000 to ,000+. There is no fixed per-foot price on drain tile repair work , every job is scoped after a site walk.
Backwell commercial minimum is ,000. Backwell runs its own fleet , excavators, dozers, tri-axle dump trucks, compaction equipment , and self-hauls all material to and from Port Byron. No third-party trucking markup. Ron answers the phone personally and makes every estimating decision, so there is no salesperson-to-estimator handoff that slows things down. 5.0 stars across 25 Google reviews from contractors, developers, and commercial property owners across Central New York.
Call (315) 400-2654 for drain tile repair estimates in Port Byron, NY, or send site plans, drone photos, or existing drainage drawings for review. Backwell typically responds within 24 hours on commercial inquiries and can get on site within a week for serious project walks.
Related services in Port Byron: Utility Site Work · Storm Drainage · Commercial Site Work · Solar Site Work · Excavation · Reviews
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.