Mass grading and fine grading services for residential and commercial projects. Proper drainage, building pads, and finish grades to spec. Serving Baldwinsville and all of Onondaga County.
Backwell provides professional grading services in Baldwinsville, Onondaga County, and the surrounding area. Proper grading is the foundation of every successful project. Get it wrong and you are dealing with drainage problems, settling, and costly rework for years. Backwell provides both mass grading for large-scale earthmoving operations and precision fine grading for final surfaces. Our dozer and GPS-guided equipment deliver accurate grades that meet engineering specifications the first time.
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 grading project in Baldwinsville, 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.
Baldwinsville straddles the Seneca River in northern Onondaga County, where the river cuts through a broad lowland between the Oswego drumlin field and the Seneca-Oneida corridor. Soils across the village and surrounding industrial parks are a mosaic: Palmyra gravelly loam and Howard gravelly loam on the outwash terraces, Lamson and Minoa very fine sandy loams in the floodplain benches, and heavier Canandaigua silty clay loam in relict lake-bottom pockets near Seneca Knolls and the Three Rivers confluence.
Hydrology dominates planning. The Seneca River, the Oswego Canal lock at B'ville, and the Seneca River Floodplain control a significant share of buildable topography, and high groundwater is routine within a few feet of the surface on the river terraces. Commercial excavation in Baldwinsville typically involves dewatering on river-side parcels, stormwater management tied to the NYSDEC Seneca watershed permit, and importing select structural fill where native soils grade toward silt and fine sand. Shallow bedrock is uncommon inside the village. Winter frost depth and the shallow water table together push utility burial to 54 inches or more on most commercial parcels.