Mass grading and fine grading services for residential and commercial projects. Proper drainage, building pads, and finish grades to spec. Serving Syracuse and all of Onondaga County.
Backwell provides professional grading services in Minoa, 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 Minoa, 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.
Minoa sits east of Syracuse in the Limestone Creek corridor on the lowland below the Onondaga Escarpment. Soils across the village and surrounding commercial parcels are dominated by Minoa fine sandy loam and Lamson very fine sandy loam on the flats — the Minoa series is in fact named for the hamlet — with Palmyra gravelly loam on the modestly higher ground and occasional muck pockets in the relict wetland swales.
Limestone Creek and Ley Creek control local drainage, both feeding into Onondaga Lake. Commercial site work in Minoa regularly involves shallow water tables on the fine-textured lowland parcels, dewatering on slab and foundation excavations, and structural fill importation where native silt loams cannot carry commercial loading. The Onondaga Escarpment rises to the south, and projects on parcels close to Manlius Center can encounter Onondaga limestone at shallow depth. Stormwater permitting ties into the Onondaga Lake AOC framework and Onondaga County MS4 standards. Structural fill is commonly required on commercial parcels to raise building pads above seasonal water elevations, and frost-susceptible fines push utility burial depth.