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Environmental Remediation Contractor in Camillus, NY

Contaminated soil excavation, removal, and site remediation supporting brownfield redevelopment and environmental cleanup. Serving Camillus and all of Onondaga County.

Environmental Remediation Services in Camillus

Backwell provides professional environmental remediation services in Camillus, Onondaga County, and the surrounding area. Contaminated sites need careful excavation and material handling to protect workers, the public, and the environment. Backwell provides the earthwork component of environmental remediation projects, contaminated soil excavation, segregation, loading, and transport to approved disposal facilities.

What We Provide in Camillus

Why Camillus Chooses Backwell

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 environmental remediation project in Camillus, 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.

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Environmental Remediation in Camillus

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Environmental Remediation in Nearby Areas

Geography & Site Conditions in Camillus, NY (Onondaga County)

Camillus occupies the Onondaga-Ninemile Creek corridor west of Syracuse, in a landscape of low drumlins giving way to the Onondaga Escarpment. Upland soils are predominantly Honeoye and Lima silt loams over limestone-rich glacial till, with bands of Palmyra gravelly loam along old outwash channels. Ninemile Creek's floodplain carries Teel silt loam and Wayland silt loam with seasonally perched water.

Drainage considerations in Camillus are inseparable from the legacy of the Solvay Process wastebeds and the Ninemile Creek remediation corridor, which influence both grading and stormwater permitting on parcels west of West Genesee Street. Site work here commonly involves trenching through stony till on the drumlin flanks, dealing with limestone bedrock at shallow depth on Split Rock and along the escarpment, and engineering erosion controls that meet the Onondaga Lake watershed protection standards. Frost-susceptible silt loams push utility depths into the four-to-five-foot range on most commercial sites. The combination of karst potential on limestone bedrock and reactive industrial legacy soils means subsurface characterization is routine on commercial redevelopment parcels. Stormwater permitting almost always ties back to the Onondaga Lake AOC framework.