Water main and sewer line installation, replacement, and repair for new construction and infrastructure projects. Serving Camden and all of Oneida County.
Backwell provides professional water & sewer installation services in Camden, Oneida County, and the surrounding area. Backwell installs water mains, sewer lines, and associated infrastructure for new construction and replacement projects. Our excavators and crews handle mainline installation, service connections, manholes, hydrants, and all associated earthwork. We work with municipalities, developers, and general contractors on projects ranging from single residential connections to subdivision-wide utility infrastructure.
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 water & sewer installation project in Camden, 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.
Camden sits in northwestern Oneida County on the Tug Hill's southern flank, where Fish Creek drops out of the plateau and crosses a broad, gently rolling glacial plain. Upland parcels are typically Worth and Lordstown channery silt loams over Paleozoic sandstone, while the creek corridor and its tributaries run through Alden silt loam and Teel silt loam with higher organic content and slow natural drainage.
Site work in and around Camden is shaped by Fish Creek's watershed, which drains to Oneida Lake, and by the numerous tributary draws that can carry heavy snowmelt flows. Seasonal high water tables are common on the lower-lying agricultural parcels being converted to commercial use, and structural fill is often required where the native profile runs to silt loam over a fragipan. Bedrock outcrops appear on the higher terraces along Route 13 and toward the hamlets of McConnellsville and Blossvale. Projects typically integrate culvert sizing and erosion control for Fish Creek floodplain conditions. Shallow bedrock outcrops appear on the higher terraces along Route 13 and toward the hamlets of McConnellsville and Blossvale.