Stormwater management systems, storm drain installation, culverts, and drainage solutions for Central New York. Serving Cortland and all of Cortland County.
Backwell provides professional storm drainage services in Cortland, Cortland County, and the surrounding area. Central New York gets serious precipitation, and poor drainage destroys properties. Backwell designs and installs stormwater management systems that handle the volume and protect your investment. From simple yard drainage and French drains to full storm sewer systems, culvert installations, and retention areas, we build drainage solutions that work in CNY conditions.
Based in Constantia, NY, we are local to Cortland County and know the area, the soil conditions, the regulations, and the contractors. When you hire Backwell for your storm drainage project in Cortland, 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.
Cortland sits at the confluence of the Tioughnioga River's east and west branches on a broad valley floor carved into the Appalachian Plateau. The valley soils across the city's commercial and industrial corridors are dominated by Howard gravelly loam and Chenango gravelly loam on the outwash terraces, fast-draining and well-suited to most foundation work, while the adjacent hillsides carry Lordstown and Mardin channery silt loams over fragipan substrates.
Hydrology here reflects the Tioughnioga's flashy response to plateau rainfall. The river and its tributaries define the floodplain along Route 13 and Route 11, and the sole-source aquifer underneath the valley imposes stricter stormwater infiltration and contamination controls on any commercial project. Site work in Cortland regularly involves managing cobble-heavy outwash in utility trenches, engineering aquifer-protection stormwater on pavement-heavy sites, and dealing with steeply rising side slopes where rock and fragipan both constrain excavation. Frost depth on the valley floor runs into the four-foot range. Projects along the I-81 corridor routinely require detailed geotechnical investigation to characterize outwash depth, rock depth, and aquifer protection measures before finalizing site plans.