Solar installation site clearing, grading, access road construction, and trenching for Central New York renewable energy projects. Serving New Hartford and all of Oneida County.
Backwell provides professional solar farm site prep services in New Hartford, Oneida County, and the surrounding area. Central New York is seeing a massive expansion of solar energy installations, and every one of them needs professional site preparation before a single panel goes up. Backwell provides the full scope of earthwork for solar farm developers, land clearing, grubbing, rough grading, access road construction, and conduit trenching. Our fleet and hauling capacity let us handle large-acreage solar projects efficiently.
Based in Constantia, NY, we are local to Oneida County and know the area, the soil conditions, the regulations, and the contractors. When you hire Backwell for your solar farm site prep project in New Hartford, 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.
New Hartford sits in the Sauquoit Creek valley just southwest of Utica in central Oneida County, on terrain that transitions from the Mohawk River lowland up onto the Appalachian Plateau. Valley-floor soils along the commercial corridors around Seneca Turnpike and Commercial Drive are dominated by Palmyra gravelly loam and Howard gravelly loam on the outwash, with Wayland silt loam in the Sauquoit Creek floodplain and Mardin channery silt loam on the climbing valley sides.
Sauquoit Creek drains north into the Mohawk River, and the watershed has a well-documented flashy response to heavy rainfall. Commercial site work in New Hartford regularly involves floodplain management along the creek, cobble-heavy trenching in the outwash, and fragipan-restricted drainage on the higher-elevation parcels toward Clinton Road. Stormwater design ties into the Mohawk River watershed and Oneida County MS4 standards. Shallow bedrock shows up on the plateau-edge parcels south of Route 840. Frost depth is moderately deep given the interior Mohawk valley climate. Structural fill is often required on the clay-loam and silt-loam flats near Sauquoit Creek, where native soils lose bearing capacity under commercial loading.