HomeServicesGrading › Central Square, NY
Call or text:(315) 400-2654Free estimates • Ron responds personally

Grading Contractor in Central Square, NY

Mass grading and fine grading services for residential and commercial projects. Proper drainage, building pads, and finish grades to spec. Serving Central Square and all of Oswego County.

Grading Services in Central Square

Backwell provides professional grading services in Central Square, Oswego 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.

What We Provide in Central Square

Why Central Square Chooses Backwell

Based in Constantia, NY, we are local to Oswego County and know the area, the soil conditions, the regulations, and the contractors. When you hire Backwell for your grading project in Central Square, 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.

Free Estimate

Grading in Central Square

Email Us

Grading in Nearby Areas

Geography & Site Conditions in Central Square, NY (Oswego County)

Central Square occupies the south-central part of Oswego County, on the sandy lake plain left by Glacial Lake Iroquois between Oneida Lake and Lake Ontario. The working soils across the I-81 corridor and Route 49 commercial zones are Colonie loamy sand, Elnora loamy fine sand, and Granby loamy fine sand, all rapidly drained on uplands but paired with Ira and Stockholm loamy fine sands in the low ground where a hardpan perches winter water.

The landscape drains in multiple directions through a dense network of small tributaries feeding Big Bay, Oneida Lake, and the Oswego River. Commercial excavation here usually trades one set of problems for another: upland sand handles septic and infiltration well but lacks cohesion for steep cuts, while the lower-lying parcels require extensive stormwater treatment, shallow-water-table mitigation, and select structural fill. Frost depth and erodibility both push design details on parking lots, culverts, and utility trenches. Bedrock is not a normal concern in the lake-plain soils.