Commercial land clearing, forestry mulching, and vegetation management for development and institutional sites.
Land clearing inside Fulton's city limits differs from rural clearing work because most parcels are either small, bounded by existing structures, or fall under redevelopment permits that prohibit open burning and require specific material handling protocols. A former industrial parcel along the Oswego River might be overgrown with thirty years of volunteer tree growth over fill material that cannot legally be disturbed without environmental oversight, and a downtown commercial parcel might require removal of a few mature street trees that need city approval before they come down. Backwell handles clearing across Fulton with equipment matched to the conditions: skid steer mulchers for brush and saplings, tracked feller-bunchers for marketable timber, excavators with grapples for root mass removal, and grinder trucks for on-site reduction of brush to mulch. We segregate vegetative debris from any contaminated soil encountered, stockpile marketable logs separately, and haul non-marketable wood waste to licensed composting or grinding facilities. Stump removal and final site dressing follow once the clearing phase is closed out.
Mechanical clearing with forestry mulchers, selective cutting, stump grinding, full grubbing, and topsoil management. 5-acre minimum. Brush, saplings, heavy timber, and overgrown parcels.
Fulton sits on the Ontario lake plain, and the native soil profile is dominated by dense glaciolacustrine clay and silty clay loam with seasonally high water tables. Along the Oswego River corridor and throughout the former industrial belt, native clay is overlain by decades of historic fill: slag, cinder, foundry sand, construction rubble, and occasional coal ash from heating plants that served the original Nestle, Miller, and Armstrong facilities. Depths of fill vary from two feet to over twelve feet on parcels closest to the river. Groundwater runs shallow across most of the city core, often within four to six feet of grade, and the Oswego River floodplain extends well into the commercial district. Legacy industrial sites carry documented contamination concerns including petroleum, solvents, and heavy metals, and any excavation on or adjacent to the former Nestle footprint requires pre-characterization sampling and a soil management plan coordinated with NYSDEC.
The City of Fulton issues its own building, grading, and right-of-way permits through the Codes Enforcement Office, and any work within the Oneida Street or West Broadway commercial corridors requires coordination with the Downtown Revitalization Initiative planning overlay. Excavation within 200 feet of the Oswego Canal federal navigation channel triggers US Army Corps of Engineers Section 10 and Section 404 review in addition to NYSDEC Article 15 protected stream permits. Former industrial parcels, particularly the Nestle, Miller Brewing, and Armstrong Cork footprints, fall under NYSDEC Brownfield Cleanup Program protocols and some sites carry EPA Superfund oversight. A DEC-approved Soil and Materials Management Plan is required before any earthwork begins on listed sites. Standard municipal requirements include stormwater SWPPPs for disturbance over one acre, dewatering discharge permits, and right-of-way bonds for work in Oneida Street, West Broadway, Route 3, Route 48, and Route 481.
Backwell serves commercial and municipal clients throughout Fulton, 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