Fish-passage compliant stream crossings for forestry, municipal, agricultural, and commercial projects.
Stream crossing construction in Liverpool is concentrated in the tributaries feeding Onondaga Lake, including Ley Creek, Bloody Brook, and smaller unnamed channels draining the flats east of the village. Backwell constructs commercial and municipal stream crossings using box culverts, arch culverts, bottomless arches, and bridge abutments depending on hydraulic demand and environmental review outcome. Every stream crossing in this watershed requires NYSDEC Article 15 protection of waters permit and US Army Corps of Engineers verification, and most require a stream assessment by a qualified biologist before construction can proceed.
Open-bottom arches, embedded box culverts, timber bridges, and hardened fords built to AOP/NAACC standards. DEC Article 15 Protection of Waters permits, in-water work window coordination.
Liverpool's soil conditions are heavily influenced by the Onondaga Lake basin and glacial lake deposits that blanket the village and surrounding Salina flats. Within a half-mile of the lakeshore, contractors encounter silty clay loams over lacustrine silts with groundwater often within four to six feet of surface grade, particularly in Long Branch, Willow Bay, and the lower sections off Old Liverpool Road. Moving east toward Electronics Parkway and Buckley Road, soils transition to denser glacial till with cobbles and occasional boulders requiring ripper or hoe ram work. Legacy fill is common on parcels along Route 57 and the former industrial zones near the lake.
Jurisdictional split matters in Liverpool. The Village of Liverpool operates its own building department, code enforcement, and DPW for right-of-way work within village limits, while the surrounding Town of Salina handles permits for the much larger Galeville, Electronics Parkway, Buckley Road, and Morgan Road commercial zones. Onondaga County DOT has jurisdiction over Route 57, Buckley Road, and Old Liverpool Road. Projects within the Onondaga Lake watershed trigger NYSDEC Article 15 and Article 17 reviews. SPDES general permit coverage is mandatory for any disturbance over one acre.
Backwell serves commercial and municipal clients throughout Liverpool, 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
Liverpool wraps the northern end of Onondaga Lake in Onondaga County, on a low-relief lake plain built largely from historic lake-bottom and marsh deposits. Soils along the Old Liverpool Road, Route 370, and the I-81 commercial corridors are dominated by Lamson and Minoa fine sandy loams and very fine sandy loams, with Carlisle muck and Palms muck in the extensive wetland legacy parcels around Onondaga Lake Park and the Seneca River mouth.
Hydrology in Liverpool is defined by Onondaga Lake, the Seneca River, and multiple small tributaries feeding both. The Onondaga Lake Superfund/AOC cleanup program controls earthwork, dewatering, and soil-disposal permitting on a significant fraction of the commercially zoned land. Site work here commonly involves variable historic industrial fill, high water tables within a few feet of the surface, and structural fill importation where native silty fines lose bearing under saturated loading. Bedrock is deep. Stormwater design ties directly into the Onondaga Lake watershed framework. Projects along Old Liverpool Road and Onondaga Lake Parkway almost always require specialized subsurface characterization and remediation-grade soil management plans.