Hydraulic breaking, ripping, and mechanical removal for bedrock, ledge, and hard material excavation.
Rock excavation in Oswego shows up in unexpected places. The Ontario Lake Plain is dominated by clay, but shale and sandstone ledge rises close to the surface along the river bluff, under portions of the east side near Fort Ontario, and in pockets along the Route 104 corridor heading east toward Scriba. Our rock excavation services include ripping with oversized excavators, hoe-ram hammering, controlled rock splitting, and, when conditions and permits allow, controlled blasting with licensed blasting subcontractors. We perform preconstruction condition surveys on neighboring buildings, install seismic and air-overpressure monitoring, and coordinate with the City of Oswego Fire Department and local code enforcement on any blasting work. For sensitive historic districts and SUNY Oswego campus projects, we typically rely on mechanical removal methods to avoid vibration concerns. Our crews handle rock for footings, utility trenches, basements, and parking-lot subgrades. For commercial rock excavation projects in Oswego starting at $20,000, we bring the equipment, permits, and engineering documentation needed to move ledge rock on schedule.
Hydraulic breakers, rippers, and mechanical removal for bedrock, ledge rock, and boulders. Hammer work for rippable rock, coordination with blasting contractors for solid rock.
Oswego sits on the Ontario Lake Plain, where glacial retreat left thick lacustrine clay, silt, and fine sand deposits over shale bedrock. North and west of downtown, crews typically encounter 8 to 20 feet of stiff lake clay before hitting weathered Oswego sandstone or shale. The downtown core along West First Street and Bridge Street is layered with more than a century of industrial fill, cinder, brick rubble, and old wood cribbing from the original canal and harbor works, which complicates trenching and foundation work. Groundwater sits high across the entire river corridor and the Port of Oswego, often within three to five feet of grade, and tidal seiche effects on Lake Ontario can push the water table higher on short notice. Near Fort Ontario and the east bluff, thinner soils over fractured bedrock demand different dewatering and shoring strategies than the saturated lowlands only a few blocks away.
Work in Oswego involves more overlapping jurisdictions than almost any other city its size. The City of Oswego Department of Public Works issues street opening, excavation, and stormwater permits, and any project touching the Oswego River, its locks, or the dam corridor requires a NYS Canal Corporation occupancy or work permit because the Oswego Canal is still an active federal-navigation-linked waterway. Anywhere within the Lake Ontario coastal zone, the NYS Department of State Coastal Management Program review applies, and waterfront projects near Wright's Landing Marina and the Port of Oswego face additional U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and DEC Article 15 review. The downtown historic waterfront district and Fort Ontario State Historic Site trigger State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO) archaeological review for any ground disturbance. Contractors working on Route 104 or Route 481 inside the city must also coordinate with NYSDOT Region 3 for work-zone and highway-work permits.
Backwell serves commercial and municipal clients throughout Oswego, 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