Farm ponds, retention ponds, swimming ponds, and water feature excavation. Full site work from clearing to final shaping, dam and berm construction, and inlet/outlet installation.
Backwell excavates ponds for farm operations, residential properties, commercial sites, and stormwater management systems throughout East Syracuse, Onondaga County, and the surrounding area. Whether you need a new farm pond for livestock watering and irrigation, a retention basin for a development project, or a recreational swimming pond, we bring the equipment and expertise to get the excavation done right.
Proper pond construction requires more than just digging a hole. We evaluate soil permeability, establish the right depth profile for your intended use, engineer the dam and spillway to handle your watershed, and install inlet/outlet structures to manage water levels. Our team handles all associated earthwork including clearing the site, shaping the basin, constructing the dam and berms, and final grading of the surrounding area.
Contact us today for a free estimate on pond excavation in East Syracuse. We will evaluate the site, discuss your goals, and give you a realistic project scope and price.
East Syracuse occupies the lowland corridor between Syracuse proper and the Onondaga Escarpment, an area historically defined by the New York Central rail yards and now by dense commercial, industrial, and warehouse development along Route 298 and the I-481 corridor. Native soils are a mix of Palmyra gravelly loam on the higher outwash benches and Lamson and Minoa very fine sandy loams on the flatter industrial land, with fill common across the rail-yard legacy parcels.
Ley Creek, Butternut Creek, and multiple small tributaries drain the area into Onondaga Lake, and the historic industrial history means stormwater and soil-management permitting often runs through the Onondaga Lake AOC framework. Commercial excavation in East Syracuse routinely encounters variable historic fill, shallow water tables along the former Erie Canal alignment, and reinforcement needs on slab and pavement subgrades where native fines lose bearing when saturated. Bedrock is deep across the lowland corridor. Stormwater design ties into the Onondaga Lake watershed framework, with enhanced sediment and phosphorus controls on any industrial redevelopment.