Excavation for Wilton hillside foundations, additions, and drainage projects. Pool digs on Belden Hill and Nod Hill slopes. Utility trenches through ledge on Cannondale properties. We work the Wilton elevation changes, rocky ground, and Norwalk River corridor wetland setbacks every project.
Excavation is the work that has to happen before most other construction can start. Foundation digs, trenches for utilities, drainage channels, grading, and site prep for additions. The work is invisible once the project is finished, but if the excavation was done badly, every later step costs more. We have been excavating Connecticut sites for 25 years.


Foundation digs, utility trenches, and pool excavations. We mark the area, dig to spec, and handle spoil and backfill with proper compaction in lifts. We coordinate with your GC, plumber, and utility company so the work happens in the right order.

Call before you dig first. Access and equipment protection second. Actual dig, grade check, backfill in lifts, and cleanup third. Every step planned before equipment moves on your property.
Compaction, drainage, and property protection are the three failure points. We plan the work zone, protect what stays, and leave the property clean when we are done.
H3: Wilton Building Department Belden Hill and Nod Hill hillside properties have steep slopes, rocky ledge, and elevation changes. Excavation requires specialized equipment access planning and erosion control during the entire project scope. Wilton B
H3: Rocky Ledge Excavation Excavation along the Norwalk River corridor through Cannondale has Conservation Commission buffer setbacks, often 50 to 100 feet from the river. Erosion control mandatory. We follow regulatory rules throughout. Wilton hills
Same day response. We respond in 2 hours.






Local questions with local answers. Call us if yours is not here.
Contact UsMost foundation work, pool digs, and significant grading need Wilton Building Department permits. Conservation Commission for Norwalk River buffer zones. Tree Warden for street tree adjacent work. Connecticut law requires call before you dig on every excavation. We file paperwork and verify utility marking before any equipment moves on the project.
Yes. Belden Hill and Nod Hill hillside properties are part of our regular service area. Steep slopes, rocky ledge, and elevation changes make these jobs more complex than flat lot excavation. We plan equipment access carefully during the site visit, install erosion control measures, and document compliance throughout the project.
Depends on the project. Small foundation digs on accessible flat lots start in the low thousands. Hillside excavation costs more because of access complexity and rocky ground. Norwalk River corridor projects have additional permit and erosion control costs. Free site visit and written scope before any equipment moves.
Wilton hillside properties often have ledge close to the surface. We assess ledge conditions during the site visit and bring rock breaking equipment when needed. Sometimes ledge changes foundation depth or pool position because excavating through ledge is expensive and slow on residential projects throughout the hillside neighborhoods.
Yes. Norwalk River corridor properties through Cannondale and Comstock have Conservation Commission buffer setbacks for the regulated zone. We follow setbacks, install erosion control before excavation begins, stage spoil well away from the water, and document compliance for the town inspector throughout the entire project scope.
Wilton hillside property in Belden Hill ready for foundation excavation? Cannondale river property with drainage problems? Pool dig on Nod Hill needing ledge breaking? Tell us about the project. We come out, look at the slope and the access, and put a written scope and price together.
Lots and back yards cleared for construction.
Walkways, walls, patios built to last.
Stumps ground below ground level.
Big trees, dead trees removed completely.
Heavy equipment for difficult work.
New beds and full property makeovers.
We bring the crew to all of Fairfield County and beyond.