24-hour emergency response for washouts, sinkholes, culvert failures, and flood damage. FEMA documentation supported.
Emergency washout repair calls come in after heavy rain events cut gullies across commercial parking lots, erode slopes on development sites, scour out culvert inlets, undermine pavement edges, and damage drainage structures. Backwell responds to washout emergencies with crews and equipment staged for quick deployment, because the second storm always follows the first and temporary repairs have to hold until permanent work can be scheduled. Our emergency response scope includes stabilizing failed slopes with rock and geotextile, replacing washed-out culverts and drainage structures, rebuilding eroded embankments, regrading damaged parking areas, and restoring access roads that have been cut by flowing water. Auburn's position in the Owasco Lake watershed means every emergency repair also has to address water quality, sediment that reached a waterway needs to be reported and, where practical, recovered before it migrates further downstream. We document each emergency call with photos, field notes, and time records that support insurance claims, FEMA disaster assistance applications, and owner reimbursement from funding programs. Permanent repairs follow the emergency stabilization once engineering and permitting are in place.
24-hour emergency response for road washouts, culvert failures, bridge approach collapses, embankment failures, and flood damage. Temporary stabilization plus permanent engineered repair.
Auburn's subsurface conditions are shaped by its position at the Owasco Lake outlet, where glacial lake sediments dominate the valley floor. Downtown and the Owasco River corridor sit on deep lacustrine clay and silt deposits, often soft and saturated, with perched groundwater common within a few feet of grade. Historic industrial fill from 19th-century mill operations complicates excavation along Seymour Street, the outlet, and portions of West Genesee Street, where construction crews routinely encounter buried foundations, cinders, brick rubble, and abandoned utility runs. Moving north toward the correctional facility and Grant Avenue, the terrain rises onto glacial till and drumlin deposits with denser, stonier soils and shallower bedrock. The Emerson Park area features reworked shoreline sediments and seasonally high water tables. Bedrock is typically Onondaga limestone or Hamilton Group shale, surfacing on the eastern and southern uplands. Any excavation near the lake outlet or river corridor should anticipate dewatering requirements and contaminated soil screening.
Auburn excavation work falls under overlapping jurisdictions tied to the Owasco Lake watershed, the city's role as a drinking water supplier, and Cayuga County environmental oversight. The Owasco Lake Watershed Inspection Program, administered jointly by Auburn and the Town of Owasco, enforces strict erosion and sediment control requirements on any ground-disturbing work within the watershed boundary, with mandatory inspections and harmful algal bloom prevention measures. The Cayuga County Water Quality Management Agency reviews stormwater practices and septic-related excavation. Downtown projects along Genesee Street and State Street require review by the Auburn Historic Resources Review Board when work affects contributing structures in the local historic district. Standard requirements include NY 811 Dig Safely markouts, SPDES general permit coverage for sites over one acre, Cayuga County Health Department permits for water and sewer connections, and Auburn DPW street opening permits. Trucking routes through downtown are restricted, and any work near the Owasco outlet requires additional DEC coordination.
Backwell serves commercial and municipal clients throughout Auburn, including:
Commercial minimum $20,000. We run our own fleet , excavators, dozers, tri-axle dump trucks, compaction equipment , and self-haul all material. No third-party trucking markup, no schedule surprises. 5.0 stars across 25 Google reviews from contractors, developers, and municipal clients across Central New York.
For broader commercial site work in the region, see our guide on commercial site work costs in Central New York.
Call (315) 400-2654 for project estimates, or send site plans for review. We typically respond within 24 hours on commercial inquiries.
Related services: Excavation · Demolition · Site Preparation · Grading · Underground Utilities · Reviews
Auburn sits at the north end of Owasco Lake in Cayuga County, on a landscape shaped by retreating Laurentide ice. The dominant soils across the city's commercial corridors are Honeoye silt loam on upland till, with bands of Lima and Kendaia silt loams following low-relief swales. Closer to the Owasco Outlet and along the lakeshore, fine-textured Canandaigua silty clay loam and occasional Palmyra gravelly loam appear where post-glacial deltas built out.
Drainage considerations in Auburn are driven by that Owasco Outlet corridor, the Owasco Inlet valley to the south, and several small tributaries that cross the city grid before emptying into Seneca River drainage. Site work here often involves managing seasonal high water tables on the flatter clay-loam parcels, trenching through cobbly till on the uplands toward Route 5 and the NYS Thruway corridor, and engineering stormwater controls that meet both municipal MS4 standards and Finger Lakes watershed protection rules. Rock is generally shallow only on the higher drumlin crests.